India, March 5 -- Nature has its own rhythm. Flowers bloom, bees arrive, fruits grow, and then life moves on. But with the changing climate, this rhythm is now being disrupted. Clearly, the impact of climate change is no longer limited to temperatures or melting glaciers. Its effects are also clearly visible on the plants and flowers in the most biodiverse regions of the Earth.

A new study on this matter has revealed that with the warming of the earth, the flowering time in tropical areas has started changing.

Many tropical plants are now blooming weeks, even months, earlier or later than they used to. Nature's clock is shifting. This change is very slow and is invisible to the naked eye. Howevre, its effects are profound enough to disr...