Americas Bee Map - interpretation please

Started by eltalia, March 14, 2018, 04:50:37 PM

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eltalia

map attached was posted elsewhere with the comment;
"Another interesting discovery is the forage map of the
USA through NASA that I found and am sharing."

Yet I get nothing from it.
Am I the only one left wondering..wt...!

Bill


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Van, Arkansas, USA

Bill, this is a totally cool map.  I found NASA original that is touch sensitive.  A person can touch a colored region, such as Arkansas and a pop up appears with the flowers of that region and blooming times throughout the flowering period.  In Arkansas from March till September/October and listed at least 20 different flowers that the bees forage on.

A detailed map, Buddy, touch sensitive on my iPhone.  Very useful information as some flowers listed are unknown to me,,,,,, joe pye,, or something like that.  I just took a quick look.

Funny, a fella on the other side of the planet discovers and provided a useful flower map of the US, my area in detail included. Thanks Bill.
Cheers


Bush_84

Cool map but I?d say dates are off for my region. Everything seems to be a month or two early.

Link for interactive map.

https://honeybeenet.gsfc.nasa.gov/Honeybees/Forage.htm
Keeping bees since 2011.

Also please excuse the typos.  My iPad autocorrect can be brutal.

BeeMaster2

Democracy is 2 wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote.
Ben Franklin

texanbelchers

The dates may have shifted some due to climate, etc.  The data is from 1992 according to their footnote.   I just don't see all the listed plants around me. 

Acebird

I think the bloom dates are from earliest to latest.  Because the color bands stretch from south to north on some colors the earliest is southern regions and the latest is northern.
Brian Cardinal
Just do it

Bush_84

Quote from: Acebird on March 15, 2018, 10:42:15 AM
I think the bloom dates are from earliest to latest.  Because the color bands stretch from south to north on some colors the earliest is southern regions and the latest is northern.

That still doesn?t account for all of it. You can click on your state for specific information. The bloom dates do vary fro, where I am to southern Minnesota but not by that much. Climate may have also changed but I don?t think dandelions have ever bloomed that early in Minnesota. I think that what they did was just put a vague range for the whole region and simply list the common foliage in each state and attach the vague numbers. There?s no way that those numbers are specific for Minnesota, which I suppose is what ace was getting at.
Keeping bees since 2011.

Also please excuse the typos.  My iPad autocorrect can be brutal.

Acebird

If you look at the dark green color of MN, same as NY it stretches south all the way to OK.
Brian Cardinal
Just do it

eltalia

"In this context, important is defined by Ayers and Harman as those
species that "reliably produce a large percent of the harvested honey"
within the selected region."

Thanks guys... relevance is now clear in my head :)
Mentioned particular thanks for @Bush_84 posting the link.

Bill