![Wildflowers and a golden sunset at Timber Hollow, Shenandoah National Park - NPS photo by N. Lewis](http://web.archive.org./web/20161022095408im_/https://www.doi.gov/sites/doi.gov/files/styles/interior_place_photo/public/interior-place/photos/timber-hollow-sunse-nps-photo-by-nlewis.jpg?itok=o2boD85N)
Spring is coming early in 3/4 of national parks, according to a new study. Awesome? Not so much. As flowers bloom earlier every year, it’s disrupting the link between the wildflowers and the arrival of birds, bees, and butterflies that feed on and pollinate the flowers. In Shenandoah, an earlier spring is giving invasive plants a head start, and they’re displacing native wildflowers, leading to costly management issues.