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Flowers Galore: Paramount to Malibu Creek Walk, 2 April, 2016

April 25, 2016

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Another perfect day in paradise. This is tough, dirty, thankless, grinding work, sauntering through fields of flowers and grass waving in the breeze, snapping pictures, sniffing blossoms, spotting and identifying birds, chatting with friends and new companions, but, whatever the personal cost, someone has to do it, and you can thank your lucky stars you weren’t volunteered for this duty. Even worse, temperatures started at the frigid 58°F before soaring to a scorching 70°F, it didn’t rain and there were no bothersome insects.

Doug suffers for his art (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Doug suffers for his art (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

We wandered, as usual, around the western town movie set of Paramount Ranch (free parking!), then set off up the remnant of the devil’s racecourse (3 deaths in 18 months of operation). The lupines were a bit scarce, but the still-to-be-identified feral Onion (see slideshow) was doing fine.

Field of grass, Goldfields and Owl's Clover (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Field of grass, Goldfields and Owl’s Clover (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

There were large spreads of Owl’s Clover and Goldfields in the grassy fields at the intersection of Cornell and Mulholland, where we cross kitty-corner to the Reagan Ranch portion of Malibu Creek State Park. Anna’s Hummingbirds, Acorn Woodpeckers, Black and Say’s Phoebes, Bushtits, Yellow-rumped Warblers in various stages of

California Towhee mid-skulk (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

California Towhee mid-skulk (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

plumage molt, California and Spotted Towhees, Song Sparrows, House Finches and Lesser Goldfinches kept us company. Several American Kestrels were hawking the larger insects from treetop perches, and small flocks of Mourning Dove and Nanday Parakeet flew overhead. Even after several years of seeing and hearing this last species ever more frequently, my ear still initially identifies their calls as those of woodpeckers, or small children yelling in the distance. Eventually some portion of my brain protests loudly enough, and I realize it’s those parakeets.

Western Kingbird (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Western Kingbird
(J. Waterman 4-2-16)

We avoid the tall grass surrounding the Reagan Ranch driveway – deer tick country – but spot Bullock’s Orioles, Cassin’s and Western Kingbirds, and Ash-throated Flycatchers in the sycamores, while Ravens and Red-tailed Hawks stick closer to Mulholland Drive, searching for flattened fauna.

As we reach the Yearling Trail beginning at the back of the ranch house area, and back on the ground, we find more and more flowers: Elderberry, Horehound, Wild Cucumber, sunflowers, fiddlenecks, Johnny-Jump-Up, Blue Dick, and the always aromatic SagesWhite, Purple and Black. Miner’s Lettuce was in the shady damp area near the matates (First American acorn-grinding holes in rock). All along the trail, plenty of bees worked the flowers.

Miner's Lettuce - delicious! (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Miner’s Lettuce – delicious! (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Peggy points out an epistemological error to Chuck (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Peggy points out an epistemological error to Chuck
(J. Waterman 4-2-16)

For once we managed to avoid the mystery detour not-a-trail down the rocky escarpment, and found the true Cage Creek Trail. Sage and nightshade love this area, as do various phacelias, Fiesta Flower, Golden Current, Green-bark Ceanothus, Toyon, and everyone’s favorite plant to I.D., Poison Oak. As usual, we discussed this plant’s effects on human skin. It’s an allergy, people! Most people have this allergy, but some fortunate ones (myself included) do not.

Fiesta Flower (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

Fiesta Flower (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

Near the bottom of Cage Creek Trail lies the eponymous cage, now almost unrecognizable, a relic of the time when humans were mute and uncivilized, easily captured and domesticated by the apes who ruled the world. [The film Planet of the Apes documents in depth this era.] And then we were on Crag’s Road, the main route to the M.A.S.H. film site and common destination for the hikers, bikers, runners and outdoor classes who frequent this area.

Male Red-winged Blackbird at Century Lake displays his epaulets (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Male Red-winged Blackbird at Century Lake displays his epaulets (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Johnny Jump-up (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

Johnny Jump-up (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

A short stop at Century Lake, from which swallows sip on the wing and Red-winged Blackbirds live among the Cattails, then up and over the hump and down towards Malibu Creek, which flows out of the dam which created the lake. Water in the creek was so low that only a few Mallards could survive among the stones. From here we usually dead-head – hot and thirsty – through the line of Live Oaks which border the road to the parking area, stopping for the occasional flower and the hillside chia patch. No chia pets here – all the chia is thoroughly wild and one may approach them only with caution.

We successfully car-shuttled back to Paramount Ranch via Mulholland Drive, got out our lunches and talked until it was time to go our various ways.

Alligator Lizard [prob. Southern] (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Hungry camouflaged alligators prowl the forest! [Lizards, that is] (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

If you check out the map link, our trail route runs generally SE from Paramount Ranch.
Links to previous trips:  April 2014, April 2013, April 2012, April 2011, April 2010, March 2009

California Poppy (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

California Poppy
(D. Waterman 4-2-16)

As always, the hike was led by Peggy Burhenn, Calif. State Parks docent specializing in native plants and wildflowers. I’ve also been advised – rather insistently – to mention that there are actually “several” small up and down slopes along our route.

Unknown blue flower (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

Unknown blue flower (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

Western Swallow half-a-tail on Blue Dick (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Western Swallow half-a-tail on Blue Dick (J. Waterman 4-2-16)

Many thanks to our photographers: Lillian Johnson, Doug Waterman and Joyce Waterman.

The lists below give a seven-year comparison of what we’ve seen on this hike. There are significant differences from year-to-year, both in what we find and what is in bloom.
[Chuck Almdale]

PLANT TRIP LISTS – PARAMOUNT TO MALIBU CREEK    
X – Seen     NB – Not in Bloom     * – Introduced Species
  2016 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
WHITE 4/2 4/12 4/6 4/15 4/9 4/10 3/29
Ashy-leafed Buckwheat X NB X
Big Pod Ceanothus X X X NB X X
California Buckwheat NB NB X X NB
California Everlasting X X
Catalina Maraposa Lily X
Cliff Aster X X X
Coyote Brush NB X X X NB NB NB
Dodder X NB X X X
Dudleaya NB NB X
Elderberry X X X X NB X X
Horehound* NB NB NB X X X X
Lace Pod (green) X X X X
Lanceleaf Dudleaya NB
Linanthus X
Miner’s Lettuce X X X X X
Morning Glory X X X X
Mulefat X NB X X X X
Narrow-leafed Bedstraw X X X
Narrow-leafed Milkweed NB
Onion – not specified X X X
Poison Hemlock NB NB NB X
Poison Oak X X X
Popcorn Flower X X X X X X
Soap Plant NB NB NB X X
Western Ragweed* X
White Nightshade X X
White Sage NB NB NB X X X X
Wild Cucumber X X X X X X X
Yucca NB NB X X NB X X
YELLOW    
Burr Clover* X
Canyon Sunflower NB X
Collarless California Poppy X
Common Fiddleneck X X X X X X X
Common Goldfields X X
Deerweed X X
Golden Currant X X NB X X X X
Golden Yarrow X X X
Johnny Jump-up X X X X X X
Lomatium X X
Microseris X
Mountain Dandelion X X X
Mustard* X X X X X X X
Oriental Mustard X
Pacific Sanicle NB
Pineapple Weed* X X X X X X X
Prickly Pear Cactus NB
Small-Flowered Lotus X
Stringose Lotus X X X
Western Wallflower X X X
ORANGE    
Bush/sticky Monkeyflower X X X X X NB
California Poppy X X X X X
Scarlet Pimpernel* X X
RED    
Chalk Live-forever X
Crimson Pitcher (Hummingbird) Sage NB NB X X X X NB
Heart-leaved Penstemon NB NB
Indian Paintbrush X NB X
PINK    
Bush Mallow X
Chinese Houses X X X X X
Milk Thistle* X NB X X NB NB
Prickly Phlox X X
Purple Clarkia X
Purple Owl’s Clover X X X X
Purple Sage NB NB X X X X X
Red-stem Filaree* X X X X X X X
Spring Vetch* X X X X X X
Purple vetch X
Tom Cat Clover X X
Wild Radish* X X X X X X
Wild Sweet Pea X X X
Wooly Aster X
PURPLE / BLUE    
Baby Blue Eyes X X
Bajada Lupine X X
Black Sage NB NB X X X
Blue Dicks X X X X X X X
Blue Larkspur X X
Bull Thistle X
Bush Lupine X X X X X X
California Peony X
Caterpillar Phacelia X X X X X X
Chia X X X X X X
Common Vervain X X X X
Danny’s Skullcap X X
Dove Lupine X X X X
Fern-leaf Phacelia X X X X X
Fiesta Flower X X X X X X
Green Bark Ceanothus X NB X X N X X
Henbit* X
Italian Thistle* X
Parry’s Phacelia X X X X X
Purple Nightshade X X X X X X X
Sticky Phacelia X X
Tansy Leaf Phacelia X
Winter Vetch* X X X
Wooly Blue Curls NB
BROWN    
Curly Dock X X X
English Plantain* NB NB X
TREES, SHRUBS, OR    
NOT IN BLOOM    
Arroyo Willow X X X X X X X
California Bay Laurel NB X X X
California Bickelbush X
California Sagebrush NB X X X X X
Chamise X X X X X
Coast Live Oak X X X X X X X
Coffee Berry X X X
Gum Plant X
Hog Fennel X X X
Laurel Sumac X X X X X X X
Mistletoe X X X X X X
Mugwort X X X X X X X
Poison Oak X X X X X
Scrub Oak X X X X
Squaw Bush X X X
Stinging Nettle X
Sugarbush X X X X X X
Toyon X X X X X X
Valley Oak X X X X X
Western Sycamore X X X X X X X
Whitethorn X
Wild Rose X X X X X X
Total Plants – 118 75 52 66 73 60 70 56

 

 

Sugar Bush blossom head (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

Sugar Bush blossom head (D. Waterman 4-2-16)

Paramount – Malibu Creek SP 2016 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
Bird Name 4/2 4/12 4/6 4/15 4/9 4/10 3/29
Canada Goose 6 3 2 4 2
Gadwall 3 X
American Wigeon X
Mallard 8 3 6 8 7 10 X
Ring-necked Duck 6
Bufflehead X
Ruddy Duck X
California Quail 3H 3H 20 6 4H
Pied-billed Grebe 1 X
Great Blue Heron 1 3 1 2
Turkey Vulture 8 4 4 3 4 2 X
Northern Harrier 1
Sharp-shinned Hawk 1 1 1
Cooper’s Hawk 2 1 1 X
Red-shouldered Hawk 1+2H 3 1 6 2 X
Red-tailed Hawk 3 3 2 3 3 5 X
American Coot 2 2 9 4 4 X
Spotted Sandpiper 1
California Gull 20
Band-tailed Pigeon 3 3 3 9
Mourning Dove 20 6 1 4 8 12
Barn Owl 1
Vaux’s Swift 20
White-throated Swift 4 4 2 4 12 X
Black-chinned Hummingbird 1 1 1 1
Anna’s Hummingbird 7 1 5 1 2 4 X
Rufous Hummingbird 1
Allen’s Hummingbird 2 1 1 X
Belted Kingfisher 1 1 X
Acorn Woodpecker 18 14 12 9 8 11 X
Nuttall’s Woodpecker 6 2+3H 4 5 2 2H X
Downy Woodpecker 2+1H X
Northern Flicker 2 3 2 X
American Kestrel 2 X
Black-hooded Parakeet 8 7 5+4H 3 1
Hammond’s Flycatcher 1
Pacific-slope Flycatcher 2 3 1 1 2 X
Black Phoebe 5 3 4 4 8 8 X
Say’s Phoebe 3 1 3 1
Ash-throated Flycatcher 6 6+3H 3+2H
Cassin’s Kingbird 8 1 9 3 4 2 X
Western Kingbird 1 1 1 4 3 X
Hutton’s Vireo 1H 1
Warbling Vireo 2 X
Western Scrub-Jay 15 17 6+4H 10+20H 12 14 X
American Crow 20 19 12 15 20 6 X
Common Raven 5 8 9 2 4 5 X
Tree Swallow 10 6 4
Violet-green Swallow 4 20 20 12
Northern Rough-winged Swallow 12 15 25 35 24 X
Cliff Swallow 3 1 3 1 20 X
Barn Swallow 1 2 X
Oak Titmouse 3 4 4+15H 2+20H 9 4 X
Bushtit 6 10 5 8 8 4 X
White-breasted Nuthatch 1 3 2 2 2 X
Canyon Wren 1 1H H
House Wren 1+15H 4+18H 4+30H 4+40H 25 32 X
Bewick’s Wren 2H 4 12 2 X
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 1 3H 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1 1 2 2 X
Wrentit 3 1+5H 14H 20H 7H H X
Western Bluebird 9 3 10 10 13 10 X
Hermit Thrush 1 X
American Robin 4 2 1
Northern Mockingbird 2 6 6+3H 2 X
California Thrasher 1 1+3H 4H H
European Starling 8 11 10 1 6 12 X
Phainopepla 1H
Orange-crowned Warbler 3+5H 1+2H 1H 5 6 X
Common Yellowthroat 1H 1+4H 2 1H 6 2 X
Yellow Warbler 1 1+6H H
Yellow-rumped Warbler 4 1 4+2H 6 6 10 X
Black-throated Gray Warbler 1 X
Townsend’s Warbler X
Spotted Towhee 3+6H 3 4+6H 5+5H 8 5 X
California Towhee 7 9 4+4H 10 20 6 X
Savannah Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 4 3+5H 5+4H 7+6H 13 7 X
Lincoln’s Sparrow X
White-crowned Sparrow 10 1 X
Golden-crowned Sparrow 4 2
Dark-eyed Junco 7 10 X
Black-headed Grosbeak 1+1H 10 4H 8 3 4
Red-winged Blackbird 8 5 12 20 X
Western Meadowlark 5 X
Brown-headed Cowbird 2 1
Hooded Oriole 4 4 6
Bullock’s Oriole 2 5 5+3H 6 3 6
Purple Finch 6H H
House Finch 30+20H 16+26H 20+30H 90 60 20 X
Lesser Goldfinch 9 6+6H 6+6H 8 12 16 X
American Goldfinch 30
House Sparrow X
Total – 93 species 47 50 59 62 52 60 58

No giant festival this year in Woodley Park!

April 22, 2016
by

No giant festival this year.

Dawn at the Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve (Joe Doherty)

Dawn at the Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve (Joe Doherty)

[A message from our compatriot, San Fernando Valley Audubon]

Good news. Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve gets a reprieve. Plans for Angelfest have been scrapped for October 2016. The marketing company that hoped to bring 65,000 people a day to the area surrounding the Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve has announced plans to try again next year, but of course none of the environmental concerns will be any different then. We will not resist future mega-festivals that are located in appropriate venues — but we will continue to vigorously defend the Sepulveda Reserve and the verdant ecosystem that nurtures it.

While the decision to cancel Angelfest 2016 was no doubt based on a number of considerations, there’s little doubt that the public outcry — that would be you — was an important one. If you signed & shared the petition, if you wrote or called your elected representatives, if you submitted comments to the Army Corps, if you urged your friends and neighbors to join the fight, we are enormously grateful to you. Please stay in touch with San Fernando Valley Audubon Society through our website (new one coming!) and Facebook. We’ll need you again.

We are dedicated to a better future — and more funding — for L.A.’s natural spaces. The San Fernando Valley Audubon Society will work with the community and L.A. Recreation & Parks Department to find solutions that work for everyone – including the wildlife that can’t speak for itself.

So, yes, there is still much to do. But for today, let’s rejoice. And what better way to celebrate than a bird walk at the Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve? Join SFVAS every 1st Sunday.

Thank you all for your cards, letters, calls, texts, emails, tweets, postings and whatnot against this ill-considered event.

Full Pink Moon Update – April 21, 2016, 10:23 p.m. PDT

April 21, 2016
tags:
by

Here’s another update from SMBAS Blog on that large, disc-like, shining object which has frequently and mysteriously appeared in our nighttime sky this year (known to many as the moon).

Full Pink Moon (etc.cmu.edu)

Full Pink Moon (etc.cmu.edu)

April 21, 10:23 p.m. PDT — Full Pink Moon.   The grass pink or wild ground phlox is one of the earliest widespread flowers of spring.  Other names were the Full Sprouting Grass Moon, the Egg Moon, and —among coastal tribes —the Full Fish Moon, when the shad come upstream to spawn.

The moon’s arrives at it’s 2016 perigee — its closest point to Earth — on April 7, 10:37 a.m., when only 357,163 km away. The monthly apogee – farthest distance – of 406,350 km, is on April 21, 9:06 a.m., 13 hours before the full moon, and is almost the largest apogee for the year. So this will be a relatively small full moon.

Have a nice moon photo?  Send it to us at: misclists [AT] verizon [DOT] net, along with name to credit and time/location of photo.  [Infographic: Moon Phases & Lunar Cycles]

The Old Farmer’s Almanac has a page for each full moon. Set your eggs on the 1st, 19th, 20th, 28-30th. Plant aboveground on 12th & 13th, belowground on 4th, 5th & 23rd. Now you know, so you have no excuse.

The next significant full moon will occur on May 21, 2:14 p.m. PDT.   Keep an eye on this spot for additional late-breaking news on this unprecedented event.

This information comes to you courtesy of: http://www.space.com/24262-weird-full-moon-names-2014-explained.html written by Joe Rao.   Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmer’s Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y.

But that’s waaay too long to type in, and besides, you don’t need to go there because SMBAS has done the work for you!
[Chuck Almdale]

Angelfest continues to threaten Sepulveda Basin Wildlife Reserve – Please Act!

April 20, 2016
Woodley Park - Not the right place for a Coachella-style mega-fest

Woodley Park – Not the right place for a Coachella-style mega-fest

Angelfest fight continues – please help.

The San Fernando Valley Audubon Society is working hard to prevent a giant music festival (called Angelfest) from damaging Woodley Park and the adjacent Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve. Thank you for signing our petition. (If you haven’t, please do.) We could really use your help to continue the fight:

Contact elected officials. (See talking points below)

  • Call Congressman Brad Sherman (818) 501-9200. His district includes the Sepulveda Basin. Sherman has a keen interest in the issue and is tallying calls. We need the most!
  • Email the Mayor’s office mayor.garcetti@lacity.org.
  • Call City Councilmember Nury Martinez (818) 778-4999. Her district includes the Basin.
  • Your specific Congressional rep and LA City Council rep are next priorities.
  • Everyone who answers these phones is very receptive. You can just say you are against Angelfest, use our talking points, or state your own opinions. It’s really quick and painless.
  • Encourage friends, family, neighbors etc. to call, too.
Great Horned Owl mate stands guard (R. Ehler 2-13-16)

Park resident Great Horned Owl doesn’t like noisy neighbors (R. Ehler 2-13-16)

Attend the Public Meeting

  • The intent of this meeting it to convince the Army that Angelfest is wrong for Woodley Park.
  • Tentatively scheduled for May 10, 6:00 pm. SAVE THE DATE.
  • Tentative location Balboa Sports Complex near Balboa & Burbank, Encino.
  • Once we have specifics we will post and email. This meeting is being arranged by the Army Corps.
Female Belted Kingfisher - look for the cinnamon (J. Waterman 2-13-16)

Belted Kingfisher, park resident
(J. Waterman 2-13-16)

Background
As proposed, the Angelfest event would crowd 65,000 people per day into Woodley Park for 3 days, with five stages blaring until 11 pm. Three of the five stages are within 150 feet of the Reserve. The proposed dates are October 7-9, during Fall bird migration. You can learn more about the proposed event and our objections at www.sfvaudubon.org. For background info we recommend this in-depth story from KCET.

Key talking points – or use your own!

  • Angelfest is grossly over-sized for Woodley Park and adjacent Wildlife Reserve.
  • The promoters want the Army Corps to suspend many sensible and long-standing rules regarding large crowds in the park.
  • The crowds, noise, lights and pyrotechnics are damaging to the park and its wildlife.
  • Access and enjoyment of the park will be impeded during the event’s 26-day setup and take-down period.
  • Approval by the Army would set a precedent that risks turning a peaceful verdant park into a fairgrounds.
  • The festival was planned in secrecy. Six months from media exposure to event as opposed to 38 months for the Arroyo Seco festival coming to Pasadena.

Thanks for your support! Keep sharing the petition!

The San Fernando Valley Audubon Society sfvaudubon@gmail.com
#StopAngefest

[The above was distributed by San Fernando Valley Audubon Society.]
Read about our February 2016 field trip to Woodley Park.
[Chuck Almdale]

Dawn at the Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve (Joe Doherty)

Dawn at the Sepulveda Wildlife Reserve (Joe Doherty)

The Dark Ages Are Coming Back

April 19, 2016

1280px-Corvus_cornix_-_Hooded_Crow_-_Leş_kargası_02ICYMI: In Case You Missed It -From the New York Times

Boulder, Colo. — IMAGINE a future in which humanity’s accumulated wisdom about Earth — our vast experience with weather trends, fish spawning and migration patterns, plant pollination and much more — turns increasingly obsolete. As each decade passes, knowledge of Earth’s past becomes progressively less effective as a guide to the future. Civilization enters a dark age in its practical understanding of our planet.

To comprehend how this could occur, picture yourself in our grandchildren’s time, a century hence. Significant global warming has occurred, as scientists predicted. Nature’s longstanding, repeatable patterns — relied on for millenniums by humanity to plan everything from infrastructure to agriculture — are no longer so reliable. Cycles that have been largely unwavering during modern human history are disrupted by substantial changes in temperature and precipitation.

As Earth’s warming stabilizes, new patterns begin to appear. At first, they are confusing and hard to identify. Scientists note similarities to Earth’s emergence from the last ice age. These new patterns need many years — sometimes decades or more — to reveal themselves fully, even when monitored with our sophisticated observing systems. Until then, farmers will struggle to reliably predict new seasonal patterns and regularly plant the wrong crops. Early signs of major drought will go unrecognized, so costly irrigation will be built in the wrong places. Disruptive societal impacts will be widespread.

Such a dark age is a growing possibility. In a recent report, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine concluded that human-caused global warming was already altering patterns of some extreme weather events. But the report did not address the broader implication — that disrupting nature’s patterns could extend well beyond extreme weather, with far more pervasive impacts.

Our foundation of Earth knowledge, largely derived from historically observed patterns, has been central to society’s progress. Early cultures kept track of nature’s ebb and flow, passing improved knowledge about hunting and agriculture to each new generation. Science has accelerated this learning process through advanced observation methods and pattern discovery techniques. These allow us to anticipate the future with a consistency unimaginable to our ancestors.

But as Earth warms, our historical understanding will turn obsolete faster than we can replace it with new knowledge. Some patterns will change significantly; others will be largely unaffected, though it will be difficult to say what will change, by how much, and when.

The list of possible disruptions is long and alarming. We could see changes to the prevalence of crop and human pests, like locust plagues set off by drought conditions; forest fire frequency; the dynamics of the predator-prey food chain; the identification and productivity of reliably arable land, and the predictability of agriculture output.

Historians of the next century will grasp the importance of this decline in our ability to predict the future. They may mark the coming decades of this century as the period during which humanity, despite rapid technological and scientific advances, achieved “peak knowledge” about the planet it occupies. They will note that many decades may pass before society again attains the same level.

One exception to this pattern-based knowledge is the weather, whose underlying physics governs how the atmosphere moves and adjusts. Because we understand the physics, we can replicate the atmosphere with computer models. Monitoring by weather stations and satellites provides the starting point for the models, which compute a forecast for how the weather will evolve. Today, forecast accuracy based on such models is generally good out to a week, sometimes even two.

But farmers need to think a season or more ahead. So do infrastructure planners as they design new energy and water systems. It may be feasible to develop the science and make the observations necessary to forecast weather a month or even a season in advance. We are also coming to understand enough of the physics to make useful global and regional climate projections a decade or more ahead.

The intermediate time period is our big challenge. Without substantial scientific breakthroughs, we will remain reliant on pattern-based methods for time periods between a month and a decade. The problem is, as the planet warms, these patterns will become increasingly difficult to discern. This will present a troubling issue for regions of the world subject to El Niño, monsoon cycles and other long-term weather variability. Predicting extreme weather may become even more trying than it is today.

The oceans, which play a major role in global weather patterns, will also see substantial changes as global temperatures rise. Ocean currents and circulation patterns evolve on time scales of decades and longer, and fisheries change in response. We lack reliable, physics-based models to tell us how this occurs. Our best knowledge is built on what we have seen in the past, like how fish populations respond to El Niño’s cycle. Climate change will further undermine our already limited ability to make these predictions. Anticipating ocean resources from one year to the next will become harder.

Civilization’s understanding of Earth has expanded enormously in recent decades, making humanity safer and more prosperous. As the patterns that we have come to expect are disrupted by warming temperatures, we will face huge challenges feeding a growing population and prospering within our planet’s finite resources. New developments in science offer our best hope for keeping up, but this is by no means guaranteed.

Our grandchildren could grow up knowing less about the planet than we do today. This is not a legacy we want to leave them. Yet we are on the verge of ensuring this happens.