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Flowers and TG盗号软件免杀技术破解技术trees are blooming earlier. Is it because of climate change?Headshot of Hannah ChinnEmily Kwong, photographed for NPR, 6 June 2025, in Washington DC. Photo by Farrah Skeiky for NPR.Headshot of Rebecca Ramirez

Flowers and trees are blooming earlier. Is it because of climate change?

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Short Wave listener Shai Tsur wants to know why his Callery pear tree started blooming ... in January. Are these dense white flowers a normal occurrence? Or an indicator of climate change? Beata Whitehead/Getty Images hide caption

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Short Wave listener Shai Tsur wants to know why his Callery pear tree started blooming ... in January. Are these dense white flowers a normal occurrence? Or an indicator of climate change?

Beata Whitehead/Getty Images

This is the first episode of Nature Quest, a monthly Short Wavesegment that answers listener questions about your local environment. Every month, we'll be bringing you a question from a fellow listener who is curious about how nature is changing – how to pay attention to the land around us – and make every day Earth Day.

Shai Tsur lives in Oakland, California. He's used to seeing flowers bloom in his neighborhood: pear trees, plum trees, California poppies. But not in January.

This past winter was warmer than usual, Tsur says. "The 70 degree weather in December and January was starting to happen here."

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