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Hardiness zone

A hardiness zone is a geographic area defined as having a certain average annual minimum temperature, a factor relevant to the survival of many plants. In some systems other statistics are included in the calculations. The original and most widely used system, developed by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) as a rough guide for landscaping and gardening, defines 13 zones by long-term average annual extreme minimum temperatures. It has been adapted by and to other countries (such as Canada) in various forms.

Temperature scale used to define USDA hardiness zones. These are annual extreme minima (an area is assigned to a zone by taking the lowest temperature recorded there in a given year). As shown, the USDA uses a GIS dataset averaged over 1976 to 2005 for its United States maps.
Global Plant Hardiness Zones (approximate)

Unless otherwise specified, in American contexts "hardiness zone" or simply "zone" usually refers to the USDA scale. For example, a plant may be described as "hardy to zone 10": this means that the plant can withstand a minimum temperature of 30 °F (−1.1 °C) to 40 °F (4.4 °C).

Other hardiness rating schemes have been developed as well, such as the UK Royal Horticultural Society and US Sunset Western Garden Book systems. A heat zone (see below) is instead defined by annual high temperatures; the American Horticultural Society (AHS) heat zones use the average number of days per year when the temperature exceeds 30 °C (86 °F).

United States hardiness zones (USDA scale)

The USDA system was originally developed to aid gardeners and landscapers in the United States.

State-by-state maps, along with an electronic system that allows finding the zone for a particular zip code, can be found at the USDA Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) website.

In the United States, most of the warmer zones (zones 9, 10, and 11) are located in the deep southern half of the country and on the southern coastal margins. Higher zones can be found in Hawaii (up to 12) and Puerto Rico (up to 13). The southern middle portion of the mainland and central coastal areas are in the middle zones (zones 8, 7, and 6). The far northern portion on the central interior of the mainland have some of the coldest zones (zones 5, 4, and small area of zone 3) and often have much less consistent range of temperatures in winter due to being more continental, especially further west with higher diurnal temperature variations, and thus the zone map has its limitations in these areas. Lower zones can be found in Alaska (down to 1). The low latitude and often stable weather in Florida, the Gulf Coast, and southern Arizona and California, are responsible for the rarity of episodes of severe cold relative to normal in those areas. The warmest zone in the 48 contiguous states is the Florida Keys (11b) and the coldest is in north-central Minnesota (2b). A couple of locations on the northern coast of Puerto Rico have the warmest hardiness zone in the United States at 13b. Conversely, isolated inland areas of Alaska have the coldest hardiness zone in the United States at 1a.

Definitions

 
2012 update of the Hardiness Zone Map
Zone From To
0 a < −65 °F (−53.9 °C)
b −65 °F (−53.9 °C) −60 °F (−51.1 °C)
1 a −60 °F (−51.1 °C) −55 °F (−48.3 °C)
b −55 °F (−48.3 °C) −50 °F (−45.6 °C)
2 a −50 °F (−45.6 °C) −45 °F (−42.8 °C)
b −45 °F (−42.8 °C) −40 °F (−40 °C)
3 a −40 °F (−40 °C) −35 °F (−37.2 °C)
b −35 °F (−37.2 °C) −30 °F (−34.4 °C)
4 a −30 °F (−34.4 °C) −25 °F (−31.7 °C)
b −25 °F (−31.7 °C) −20 °F (−28.9 °C)
5 a −20 °F (−28.9 °C) −15 °F (−26.1 °C)
b −15 °F (−26.1 °C) −10 °F (−23.3 °C)
6 a −10 °F (−23.3 °C) −5 °F (−20.6 °C)
b −5 °F (−20.6 °C) 0 °F (−17.8 °C)
7 a 0 °F (−17.8 °C) 5 °F (−15 °C)
b 5 °F (−15 °C) 10 °F (−12.2 °C)
8 a 10 °F (−12.2 °C) 15 °F (−9.4 °C)
b 15 °F (−9.4 °C) 20 °F (−6.7 °C)
9 a 20 °F (−6.7 °C) 25 °F (−3.9 °C)
b 25 °F (−3.9 °C) 30 °F (−1.1 °C)
10 a 30 °F (−1.1 °C) +35 °F (1.7 °C)
b +35 °F (1.7 °C) +40 °F (4.4 °C)
11 a +40 °F (4.4 °C) +45 °F (7.2 °C)
b +45 °F (7.2 °C) +50 °F (10 °C)
12 a +50 °F (10 °C) +55 °F (12.8 °C)
b +55 °F (12.8 °C) 60 °F (15.6 °C)
13 a 60 °F (15.6 °C) 65 °F (18.3 °C)
b > 65 °F (18.3 °C)

History

The first attempts to create a geographical hardiness zone system were undertaken by two researchers at the Arnold Arboretum in Boston: the first was published in 1927 by Alfred Rehder,[1] and the second by Donald Wyman in 1938.[2] The Arnold map was subsequently updated in 1951, 1967, and finally 1971, but eventually fell out of use completely.

The modern USDA system began at the US National Arboretum in Washington. The first map was issued in 1960, and revised in 1965. It used uniform 10-degree Fahrenheit ranges, and gradually became widespread among American gardeners.[3][4]

The USDA map was revised and reissued in 1990 with freshly available climate data, this time with 5-degree distinctions dividing each zone into new "a" and "b" subdivisions.

In 2003, the American Horticultural Society (AHS) produced a draft revised map, using temperature data collected from July 1986 to March 2002. The 2003 map placed many areas approximately a half-zone higher (warmer) than the USDA's 1990 map. Reviewers noted the map zones appeared to be closer to the original USDA 1960 map in its overall zone delineations. Their map purported to show finer detail, for example, reflecting urban heat islands by showing the downtown areas of several cities (e.g., Baltimore, Maryland; Washington, D.C. and Atlantic City, New Jersey) as a full zone warmer than outlying areas. The map excluded the detailed a/b half-zones introduced in the USDA's 1990 map, an omission widely criticized by horticulturists and gardeners due to the coarseness of the resulting map. The USDA rejected the AHS 2003 draft map and created its own map in an interactive computer format, which the American Horticultural Society now uses.[5]

In 2006, the Arbor Day Foundation released an update of U.S. hardiness zones, using mostly the same data as the AHS. It revised hardiness zones, reflecting generally warmer recent temperatures in many parts of the country, and appeared similar to the AHS 2003 draft. The Foundation also did away with the more detailed a/b half-zone delineations.[6]

In 2012 the USDA updated their plant hardiness map based on 1976–2005 weather data, using a longer period of data to smooth out year-to-year weather fluctuations.[7] Two new zones (12 and 13) were added to better define and improve information sharing on tropical and semitropical plants, they also appear on the maps of Hawaii and Puerto Rico. There is a very small spot east of San Juan, Puerto Rico that includes the airport in coastal Carolina, where the mean minimum is 67 degrees F (19 C), which is classified as hardiness Zone 13b, the highest category, with temperatures rarely below 65 °F (18 °C). The map has a higher resolution than previous ones, and is able to show local variations due to things such as elevation or large bodies of water. Many zone boundaries were changed as a result of the more recent data, as well as new mapping methods and additional information gathered. Many areas were a half zone warmer than the previous 1990 map.[8] The 2012 map was created digitally for the internet, and includes a ZIP Code zone finder and an interactive map.[9][10]

In 2015, the Arbor Day Foundation revised another map, also with no a and b subdivisions, showing many areas having zones even warmer, with the most notable changes in the Mid Atlantic and Northeast, showing cities like Philadelphia, New York City and Washington D.C in zone 8, due to their urban heat islands.[11]

Selected U.S. cities

The USDA plant hardiness zones for selected U.S. cities as based on the 2012 map are the following:

City Zone
Albany, New York 5b/6a
Albuquerque, New Mexico 7b
Allentown, Pennsylvania 6b/7a
Anchorage, Alaska 4b/5a
Atlanta, Georgia 8a
Atlantic City, New Jersey 7b/8a
Attu Island, Alaska 8a
Austin, Texas 8b/9a
Baltimore, Maryland 7b/8a
Bakersfield, California 9b
Boise, Idaho 7a
Boston, Massachusetts 6b/7a
Buffalo, New York 6a/6b
Burlington, Vermont 5a
Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 8b/9a
Charleston, South Carolina 8b/9a
Charleston, West Virginia 7a
Charlotte, North Carolina 7b/8a
Chattanooga, Tennessee 7a/7b
Chicago, Illinois 6a
Cincinnati, Ohio 6b
Cleveland, Ohio 6b
Colorado Springs, Colorado 5b/6a
Columbus, Ohio 6a/6b
Dallas, Texas 8a/8b
Denver, Colorado 5b/6a
Detroit, Michigan 6b
El Paso, Texas 8a/8b
Fairbanks, Alaska 2a
Fresno, California 9b
Greensboro, North Carolina 7b
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 7a
Hartford, Connecticut 6b
Honolulu, Hawaii 12b
Houston, Texas 9a
Indianapolis, Indiana 5b/6a
Jacksonville, Florida 9a
Juneau, Alaska 6b/7a
Kansas City, Missouri 6a/6b
Las Vegas, Nevada 9a
Little Rock, Arkansas 8a
Los Angeles, California 9b/10a/10b
Louisville, Kentucky 6b/7a
Memphis, Tennessee 7b/8a
Miami, Florida 10b/11a
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 6a
Minneapolis, Minnesota 4b/5a
Montauk, New York 7b
Nantucket, Massachusetts 7a/7b
Nashville, Tennessee 7a
New Orleans, Louisiana 9b
New York, New York 7a/7b
Norfolk, Virginia 8a
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 7a
Omaha, Nebraska 5b
Orlando, Florida 9b
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 7a/7b
Phoenix, Arizona 9b/10a
Pierre, South Dakota 4b/5a
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 6b
Pocatello, Idaho 5b
Portland, Maine 5b
Portland, Oregon 8b/9a
Providence, Rhode Island 6b
Quad Cities, Iowa/Illinois 5b
Raleigh, North Carolina 7b/8a
Riverside, California 9b
Reno, Nevada 7a
Roanoke, Virginia 7a/7b
Sacramento, California 9b
St. George, Utah 8b
St. Louis, Missouri 6b/7a
Salt Lake City, Utah 7a/7b
San Antonio, Texas 8b/9a
San Diego, California 10b/11a
San Francisco, California 10a/10b
San Jose, California 9b/10a
San Juan, Puerto Rico 12b/13a
Savannah, Georgia 8b
Scranton, Pennsylvania 6a/6b
Seattle, Washington 8b/9a
Tampa, Florida 9b/10a
Tucson, Arizona 9b
Tulsa, Oklahoma 7a
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 8a
Utqiaġvik, Alaska 2b
Washington, D.C. 7a/7b
Wichita, Kansas 6b

Limitations

As the USDA system is based entirely on average annual extreme minimum temperature in an area, it is limited in its ability to describe the climatic conditions a gardener may have to account for in a particular area: there are many other factors that determine whether or not a given plant can survive in a given zone.

Zone information alone is often not adequate for predicting winter survival, since factors such as frost dates and frequency of snow cover can vary widely between regions. Even the extreme minimum itself may not be useful when comparing regions in widely different climate zones. As an extreme example, due to the Gulf stream most of the United Kingdom is in zones 8–9, while in the US, zones 8–9 include regions such as the subtropical coastal areas of the southeastern US and Mojave and Chihuahuan inland deserts, thus an American gardener in such an area may only have to plan for several nights of cold temperatures per year, while their British counterpart may have to plan for several months.

In addition, the zones do not incorporate any information about duration of cold temperatures, summer temperatures, or sun intensity insolation; thus sites which may have the same mean winter minima on the few coldest nights and be in the same garden zone, but have markedly different climates. For example, zone 8 covers coastal, high latitude, cool summer locations like Seattle and London, as well as lower latitude, subtropical hot summer climates like Charleston and Madrid. Farmers, gardeners, and landscapers in the former two must plan for entirely different growing conditions from those in the latter, in terms of length of hot weather and sun intensity. Coastal Ireland and central Florida are both Zone 10, but have radically different climates 99% of the year.

The hardiness scales do not take into account the reliability of snow cover in the colder zones. Snow acts as an insulator against extreme cold, protecting the root system of hibernating plants. If the snow cover is reliable, the actual temperature to which the roots are exposed will not be as low as the hardiness zone number would indicate. As an example, Quebec City in Canada is located in zone 4, but can rely on a significant snow cover every year, making it possible to cultivate plants normally rated for zones 5 or 6. But, in Montreal, located to the southwest in zone 5, it is sometimes difficult to cultivate plants adapted to the zone because of the unreliable snow cover.[citation needed]

Many plants may survive in a locality but will not flower if the day length is insufficient or if they require vernalization (a particular duration of low temperature).

There are many other climate parameters that a farmer, gardener, or landscaper may need to take into account as well, such as humidity, precipitation, storms, rainy-dry cycles or monsoons, and site considerations such as soil type, soil drainage and water retention, water table, tilt towards or away from the sun, natural or manmade protection from excessive sun, snow, frost, and wind, etc. The annual extreme minimum temperature is a useful indicator, but ultimately only one factor among many for plant growth and survival.[9][3][12]

Alternatives

An alternative means of describing plant hardiness is to use "indicator plants". In this method, common plants with known limits to their range are used.[citation needed]

Sunset publishes a series that breaks up climate zones more finely than the USDA zones, identifying 45 distinct zones in the US, incorporating ranges of temperatures in all seasons, precipitation, wind patterns, elevation, and length and structure of the growing season.[13]

In addition, the Köppen climate classification system can be used as a more general guide to growing conditions when considering large areas of the Earth's surface or attempting to make comparisons between different continents.[14] The Trewartha climate classification is often a good "real world" concept of climates and their relation to plants and their average growing conditions.[citation needed]

Australian hardiness zones

The Australian National Botanic Gardens have devised another system keeping with Australian conditions. The zones are defined by steps of 5 degrees Celsius, from −15–−10 °C for zone 1 to 15–20 °C for zone 7.[15] They are numerically about 6 lower than the USDA system. For example, Australian zone 3 is roughly equivalent to USDA zone 9. The higher Australian zone numbers had no US equivalents prior to the 2012 addition by USDA of zones 12 and 13.

The spread of weather stations may be insufficient and too many places with different climates are lumped together. Only 738 Australian stations have records of more than ten years (one station per 98,491 hectares or 243,380 acres), though more populated areas have relatively fewer hectares per station. Mount Isa has three climatic stations with more than a ten-year record. One is in zone 4a, one in zone 4b, and the other is in zone 5a. Sydney residents are split between zones 3a and 4b. Different locations in the same city are suitable for different plants.

Canadian hardiness zones

Climate variables that reflect the capacity and detriments to plant growth are used to develop an index that is mapped to Canada's Plant Hardiness Zones.[16] This index comes from a formula originally developed by Ouellet and Sherk in the mid-1960s.[17][18][19]

The formula used is: Y = -67.62 + 1.734X1 + 0.1868X2 + 69.77X3 + 1.256X4+ 0.006119X5 + 22.37X6 - 0.01832X7

where:

  • Y = estimated index of suitability
  • X1 = monthly mean of the daily minimum temperatures (°C) of the coldest month
  • X2 = mean frost free period above 0 °C in days
  • X3 = amount of rainfall (R) from June to November, inclusive, in terms of R/(R+a) where a=25.4 if R is in millimeters and a=1 if R is in inches
  • X4 = monthly mean of the daily maximum temperatures (°C) of the warmest month
  • X5 = winter factor expressed in terms of (0 °C – X1)Rjan where Rjan represents the rainfall in January expressed in mm
  • X6 = mean maximum snow depth in terms of S/(S+a) where a=25.4 if S is in millimeters and a=1 if S is in inches
  • X7 = maximum wind gust in (km/hr) in 30 years.
City Canadian Zone[16] USDA Zone[16]
Calgary 4a 4a
Edmonton 4a 3b
Halifax 6b 6a
Montreal 6a 4b
Ottawa 5b 4b
Saskatoon 3b 3a
St. John's 6a 7a
Toronto 7a 5b
Vancouver 8b 8b
Winnipeg 4a 3b
Yellowknife 0a 2a

For practical purposes, Canada has adopted the American hardiness zone classification system. The 1990 version of the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map included Canada and Mexico, but they were removed with the 2012 update to focus on the United States and Puerto Rico.[8] The Canadian government publishes both Canadian and USDA-style zone maps.[16]

European hardiness zones

Selected European cities

The table below provides USDA hardiness zone data for selected European cities:

City Zone
Amsterdam, Netherlands[20] 8b
Barcelona, Spain[21] 10a
Belgrade, Serbia[22] 7b/8a
Bratislava, Slovakia[23] 7a/7b
Bucharest, Romania[24] 7a/7b
Catania, Italy[25] 9b/10a
Dublin, Ireland[26] 8b/9a
Edinburgh, Scotland, UK[26] 8a/8b
Glasgow, Scotland, UK[26] 8b
Helsinki, Finland[27] 6b
Kaliningrad, Russia[28] 6b/7a
Kraków, Poland[29] 7a
Lisbon, Portugal[30] 10b
London, England, UK[26] 8b/9a
Ljubljana, Slovenia[31] 7b
Madrid, Spain[21] 9a
Manchester, England, UK[26] 8b
Milan, Italy[25] 9a
Moscow, Russia[28] 5a
Paris, France[32] 8b/9a
Portsmouth, England, UK[26] 9a
Prague, Czech Republic[33] 7b
Riga, Latvia[34] 6b
Rome, Italy[25] 9b
Rovaniemi, Finland[27] 4a
Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina[35] 7a/7b
Simferopol, Ukraine[36] 6b
Sochi, Russia[28] 9a
Stockholm, Sweden[37] 7a/7b
Tallinn, Estonia[38] 6a/6b
Tuapse, Russia[28] 8b
Trondheim, Norway[39] 7b
Valencia, Spain[21] 10a
Vienna, Austria[40] 7b/8a
Vorkuta, Russia[28] 2a/2b
Warsaw, Poland[29] 6b
Zürich, Switzerland[41] 7b/8a
Antwerp, Belgium[42] 8a
Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK[26] 8a/8b/9a
Berlin, Germany[43] 7a
Birmingham, England, UK[26] 8b
Cardiff, Wales, UK[26] 8b/9a
Copenhagen, Denmark[44] 8a/8b
Düsseldorf, Germany[43] 8a
Funchal, Portugal[30] 11b/12a
Gdańsk, Poland[29] 7a
Hamburg, Germany[43] 7b
Istanbul, Turkey[45] 8a/8b/9a/9b
La Coruña, Spain[21] 10b
Las Palmas, Spain[21] 12a/12b
Marseille, France[32] 9a/9b
Minsk, Belarus[46] 5a
Munich, Germany[43] 6b
Murmansk, Russia[28] 4a
Newcastle, England, UK[26] 8a/8b
Nicosia, Cyprus[47] 9b
Oslo, Norway[39] 7a
Palermo, Italy[25] 10b/11a
Plymouth, England, UK[26] 9a/9b
Porto, Portugal[30] 10a
Poznań, Poland[29] 6b
Reykjavík, Iceland[48] 7b/8a
Saint Petersburg, Russia[28] 5a
Simrishamn, Sweden[37] 8a
Sofia, Bulgaria[49] 6b/7a
Strasbourg, France[32] 8a
Thessaloniki, Greece[50] 8b/9a
Tromsø, Norway[39] 7a/7b
Umeå, Sweden[37] 5a/5b
Valletta, Malta[51] 10b
Vilnius, Lithuania[52] 5b
Wroclaw, Poland[29] 6b
Zagreb, Croatia[53] 7b/8a
Yalta, Ukraine[54] 9a

Britain and Ireland

USDA zones do not work particularly well in the UK as they are designed for continental climates and subtropical climates.[55] The high latitude, weaker solar intensity, and cooler UK summers must be considered when comparing to US equivalent. New growth may be insufficient or fail to harden off affecting winter survival in the shorter and much cooler UK summers.[55]

 
Britain and Ireland's hardiness zones, USDA scale, 2006

Owing to the moderating effect of the North Atlantic Current on the Irish and British temperate maritime climate, Britain, and Ireland even more so, have milder winters than their northerly position would otherwise afford. This means that the USDA hardiness zones relevant to Britain and Ireland are quite high, from 7 to 10, as shown below.[56]

  1. In Scotland the Grampians, Northwest Highlands and locally in the Southern Uplands; in England the Pennines; and in Wales the highest part of Snowdonia.
  2. Most of England, Wales and Scotland, parts of central Ireland, and Snaefell on the Isle of Man.
  3. Most of western and southern England and Wales, western Scotland, also a very narrow coastal fringe on the east coast of Scotland and northeast England (within 5 km (3.1 mi) of the North Sea), London, the West Midlands Urban Area, most of Ireland, and most of the Isle of Man.
  4. Very low-lying coastal areas of the southwest of Ireland and the Isles of Scilly.

In 2012 the United Kingdom's Royal Horticultural Society introduced new hardiness ratings for plants, not places. These run from H7, the hardiest (tolerant of temperatures below −20 °C (−4 °F)) to H1a (needing temperatures above 15 °C (59 °F)).[57] The RHS hardiness ratings are based on absolute minimum winter temperatures (in °C) rather than the long-term average annual extreme minimum temperatures that define USDA zones.[57]

Scandinavia and Baltic Sea Region

Scandinavia lies at the same latitude as Alaska or Greenland, but the effect of the warm North Atlantic Current is even more pronounced here than it is in Britain and Ireland. Save for a very small spot near Karasjok, Norway, which is in zone 2, nowhere in the Arctic part of Scandinavia gets below zone 3. The Faroe Islands, at 62–63°N are in zone 8, as are the outer Lofoten Islands at 68°N. Tromsø(, a coastal city in Norway at 70°N, is in zone 7, and even Longyearbyen, the northernmost true city in the world at 78°N, is still in zone 4. All these coastal locations have one thing in common, though, which are cool, damp summers, with temperatures rarely exceeding 20 °C (68 °F) (or 15 °C (59 °F) in Longyearbyen). This shows the importance of taking heat zones into account for better understanding of what may or may not grow.

 
A garden in Simrishamn, southern Sweden.

In Sweden and Finland generally, at sea level to 500 metres (1,600 ft), zone 3 is north of the Arctic Circle, including cities like Karesuando and Pajala. Kiruna is the major exception here, which being located on a hill above frost traps, is in zone 5. Zone 4 lies between the Arctic Circle and about 64–66°N, with cities such as Oulu, Rovaniemi and Jokkmokk, zone 5 (south to 61–62°N) contains cities such as Tampere, Umeå, and Östersund. Zone 6 covers the south of mainland Finland, Sweden north of 60°N, and the high plateau of Småland further south. Here one will find cities such as Gävle, Örebro, Sundsvall, and Helsinki. Åland, as well as coastal southern Sweden, and the Stockholm area are in zone 7. The west coast of Sweden (Gothenburg and southwards) enjoys particularly mild winters and lies in zone 7, therefore being friendly to some hardy exotic species (found, for example, in the Gothenburg Botanical Garden), the southeast coast of Sweden has a colder winter due to the absence of the Gulf Stream.

Denmark is in zones 9a, 8b, and 8a.[58]

Estonia is divided to warmer West and North coast (Tallinn 6b, Haapsalu 7b, Kärdla 7a, Kuressaare 7a, Paide 6a, Rakvere 6a, Narva 6a, Viljandi 6b) and colder inland (Tartu 5a, Valga 5a, Võru 5a).

Latvia's capital Riga is in zone 6b. The country is in zones 5a, 5b, 6a, 6b, 7a and 7b.

Lithuania's capital Vilnius is in zone 5b. The country is in zones 5b, 6a, 6b and 7a.[52]

Central Europe

 
Central Europe hardiness zones.[59]

Central Europe is a good example of a transition from an oceanic climate to a continental climate, which reflects in the tendency of the hardiness zones to decrease mainly eastwards instead of northwards. Also, the plateaus and low mountain ranges in this region have a significant impact on how cold it might get during winter. Generally speaking, the hardiness zones are high considering the latitude of the region, although not as high as Northern Europe with the Shetland Islands where zone 9 extends to over 60°N. In Central Europe, the relevant zones decrease from zone 8 on the Belgian, Dutch, and German North Sea coast, with the exception of some of the Frisian Islands (notably Vlieland and Terschelling), the island of Helgoland, and some of the islands in the Rhine-Scheldt estuary, which are in zone 9, to zone 5 around Suwałki, Podlachia on the far eastern border between Poland and Lithuania. Some isolated, high elevation areas of the Alps and Carpathians may even go down to zone 3 or 4. An extreme example of a cold sink is Funtensee, Bavaria which is at least in zone 3. Another notable example is Waksmund, a small village in the Polish Carpathians, which regularly reaches −35 °C (−31 °F) during winter on calm nights when cold and heavy airmasses from the surrounding Gorce and Tatra Mountains descend down the slopes to this low-lying valley, creating extremes which can be up to 10 °C (18 °F) colder than nearby Nowy Targ or Białka Tatrzańska, which are both higher up in elevation. Waksmund is in zone 3b while nearby Kraków, only 80 km (50 mi) to the north and 300 m (980 ft) lower is in zone 6a. These examples prove that local topography can have a pronounced effect on temperature and thus on what is possible to grow in a specific region.[60]

Southern Europe

The southern European marker plant for climate as well as cultural indicator is the olive tree, which cannot withstand long periods below freezing so its cultivation area matches the cool winter zone. The Mediterranean Sea acts as a temperature regulator, so this area is generally warmer than other parts of the continent; except in mountainous areas where the sea effect lowers, it belongs in zones 8–10; however, southern Balkans (mountainous Western and Eastern Serbia, continental Croatia, and Bulgaria) are colder in winter and are in zones 6–7. The Croatian (Dalmatian) coast, Albania, and northern Greece are in zones 8–9, as are central-northern Italy (hills and some spots in Po Valley are however colder) and southern France; Central Iberia is 8–9 (some highland areas are slightly colder). The Spanish and Portuguese Atlantic coast, much of Andalusia and Murcia, coastal and slightly inland southern Valencian Community, a part of coastal Catalonia, the Balearic Islands, southwestern Sardinia, most of Sicily, coastal southern Italy, some areas around Albania,[61][62] coastal Cyprus and southwestern Greece are in zone 10. In Europe, the zone 11a is limited only to a few spots. In the Iberian Peninsula, it can be found on the southern coast, namely in populated Spanish areas such as the cities of Almería, Adra, Nerja, Málaga, Marbella and in a strip of coastal land between Tarifa and Punta Carnero in the province of Cádiz.[63] In Portugal, zone 11a can be found in the Southwest on a few unpopulated sites around the municipalities of Lagos and Vila do Bispo.[64] In Greece, zone 11a can be found in areas of Crete, Karpathos and Antiparos islands.[65] The Mediterranean islands of Malta, Lampedusa and Linosa belong to zone 11a as well as a few areas on the southernmost coast of Cyprus.[citation needed] The Balkan area is also more prone to cold snaps and episodes of unseasonable warmth. For instance, despite having similar daily means and temperature amplitudes to Nantucket, Massachusetts for each month, Sarajevo has recorded below-freezing temperatures in every month of the year. [66][67]

Macaronesia

Macaronesia consists of four archipelagos: The Azores, the Canary Islands, Cape Verde and Madeira. At lower altitudes and coastal areas, the Portuguese Azores and Madeira belong to zones 11a/11b and 11b/12a respectively. The Azores range from 9a to 11b and Madeira ranges from 9b to 12a, 9a and 9b found inland on the highest altitudes such as the Mount Pico in the Azores or Pico Ruivo in Madeira.[68] The Spanish Canary Islands hardiness zones range from 8a to 12b depending on the location and the altitude. The islands are generally part of zones 11b/12a in lower altitudes and coastal areas, reaching up to 12b in populated coastal parts such as the city of Las Palmas. The lowest hardiness areas are found in Teide National Park being at 8a/8b for its very high altitude. The Teide peak is the highest peak of Macaronesia.[63] The Cape Verde islands, inside the Tropics, have hardiness zones that range from 12 to 13 in the coastal areas, while the lowest hardiness zone is found in the island of Fogo, in the country's highest peak Pico do Fogo.[citation needed]

American Horticultural Society heat zones

In addition to the USDA Hardiness zones there are American Horticultural Society (AHS) heat zones.

The criterion is the average number of days per year when the temperature exceeds 30 °C (86 °F). The AHS Heat Zone Map for the US is available on the American Horticultural Society website.[69]

Zone From To
1 < 1
2 1 7
3 8 14
4 15 30
5 31 45
6 46 60
7 61 90
8 91 120
9 121 150
10 151 180
11 181 210
12 >210

South Africa

South Africa has five horticultural or climatic zones. The zones are defined by minimum temperature.[70]

Effects of climate change

The USDA map published in 2012 shows that most of the US has become a half zone (2.8 °C or 5 °F) hotter in winter compared to the 1990 release.[8] Research in 2016 suggests that USDA plant hardiness zones will shift even further northward under climate change.[71]

See also

References

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Bibliography

  • "PlantZAfrica". SANBI. Retrieved 14 November 2016.

External links

  • Freeze/Frost data from NOAA
  • Plant Hardiness Data (Canada)
    • Plant Hardiness Zones of Canada – Interactive Map

hardiness, zone, hardiness, zone, geographic, area, defined, having, certain, average, annual, minimum, temperature, factor, relevant, survival, many, plants, some, systems, other, statistics, included, calculations, original, most, widely, used, system, devel. A hardiness zone is a geographic area defined as having a certain average annual minimum temperature a factor relevant to the survival of many plants In some systems other statistics are included in the calculations The original and most widely used system developed by the United States Department of Agriculture USDA as a rough guide for landscaping and gardening defines 13 zones by long term average annual extreme minimum temperatures It has been adapted by and to other countries such as Canada in various forms Temperature scale used to define USDA hardiness zones These are annual extreme minima an area is assigned to a zone by taking the lowest temperature recorded there in a given year As shown the USDA uses a GIS dataset averaged over 1976 to 2005 for its United States maps Global Plant Hardiness Zones approximate Unless otherwise specified in American contexts hardiness zone or simply zone usually refers to the USDA scale For example a plant may be described as hardy to zone 10 this means that the plant can withstand a minimum temperature of 30 F 1 1 C to 40 F 4 4 C Other hardiness rating schemes have been developed as well such as the UK Royal Horticultural Society and US Sunset Western Garden Book systems A heat zone see below is instead defined by annual high temperatures the American Horticultural Society AHS heat zones use the average number of days per year when the temperature exceeds 30 C 86 F Contents 1 United States hardiness zones USDA scale 1 1 Definitions 1 2 History 1 3 Selected U S cities 1 4 Limitations 1 5 Alternatives 2 Australian hardiness zones 3 Canadian hardiness zones 4 European hardiness zones 4 1 Selected European cities 4 2 Britain and Ireland 4 3 Scandinavia and Baltic Sea Region 4 4 Central Europe 4 5 Southern Europe 5 Macaronesia 6 American Horticultural Society heat zones 7 South Africa 8 Effects of climate change 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 External linksUnited States hardiness zones USDA scale EditThe USDA system was originally developed to aid gardeners and landscapers in the United States State by state maps along with an electronic system that allows finding the zone for a particular zip code can be found at the USDA Agricultural Research Service USDA ARS website In the United States most of the warmer zones zones 9 10 and 11 are located in the deep southern half of the country and on the southern coastal margins Higher zones can be found in Hawaii up to 12 and Puerto Rico up to 13 The southern middle portion of the mainland and central coastal areas are in the middle zones zones 8 7 and 6 The far northern portion on the central interior of the mainland have some of the coldest zones zones 5 4 and small area of zone 3 and often have much less consistent range of temperatures in winter due to being more continental especially further west with higher diurnal temperature variations and thus the zone map has its limitations in these areas Lower zones can be found in Alaska down to 1 The low latitude and often stable weather in Florida the Gulf Coast and southern Arizona and California are responsible for the rarity of episodes of severe cold relative to normal in those areas The warmest zone in the 48 contiguous states is the Florida Keys 11b and the coldest is in north central Minnesota 2b A couple of locations on the northern coast of Puerto Rico have the warmest hardiness zone in the United States at 13b Conversely isolated inland areas of Alaska have the coldest hardiness zone in the United States at 1a Definitions Edit 2012 update of the Hardiness Zone Map Zone From To0 a lt 65 F 53 9 C b 65 F 53 9 C 60 F 51 1 C 1 a 60 F 51 1 C 55 F 48 3 C b 55 F 48 3 C 50 F 45 6 C 2 a 50 F 45 6 C 45 F 42 8 C b 45 F 42 8 C 40 F 40 C 3 a 40 F 40 C 35 F 37 2 C b 35 F 37 2 C 30 F 34 4 C 4 a 30 F 34 4 C 25 F 31 7 C b 25 F 31 7 C 20 F 28 9 C 5 a 20 F 28 9 C 15 F 26 1 C b 15 F 26 1 C 10 F 23 3 C 6 a 10 F 23 3 C 5 F 20 6 C b 5 F 20 6 C 0 F 17 8 C 7 a 0 F 17 8 C 5 F 15 C b 5 F 15 C 10 F 12 2 C 8 a 10 F 12 2 C 15 F 9 4 C b 15 F 9 4 C 20 F 6 7 C 9 a 20 F 6 7 C 25 F 3 9 C b 25 F 3 9 C 30 F 1 1 C 10 a 30 F 1 1 C 35 F 1 7 C b 35 F 1 7 C 40 F 4 4 C 11 a 40 F 4 4 C 45 F 7 2 C b 45 F 7 2 C 50 F 10 C 12 a 50 F 10 C 55 F 12 8 C b 55 F 12 8 C 60 F 15 6 C 13 a 60 F 15 6 C 65 F 18 3 C b gt 65 F 18 3 C History Edit The first attempts to create a geographical hardiness zone system were undertaken by two researchers at the Arnold Arboretum in Boston the first was published in 1927 by Alfred Rehder 1 and the second by Donald Wyman in 1938 2 The Arnold map was subsequently updated in 1951 1967 and finally 1971 but eventually fell out of use completely The modern USDA system began at the US National Arboretum in Washington The first map was issued in 1960 and revised in 1965 It used uniform 10 degree Fahrenheit ranges and gradually became widespread among American gardeners 3 4 The USDA map was revised and reissued in 1990 with freshly available climate data this time with 5 degree distinctions dividing each zone into new a and b subdivisions In 2003 the American Horticultural Society AHS produced a draft revised map using temperature data collected from July 1986 to March 2002 The 2003 map placed many areas approximately a half zone higher warmer than the USDA s 1990 map Reviewers noted the map zones appeared to be closer to the original USDA 1960 map in its overall zone delineations Their map purported to show finer detail for example reflecting urban heat islands by showing the downtown areas of several cities e g Baltimore Maryland Washington D C and Atlantic City New Jersey as a full zone warmer than outlying areas The map excluded the detailed a b half zones introduced in the USDA s 1990 map an omission widely criticized by horticulturists and gardeners due to the coarseness of the resulting map The USDA rejected the AHS 2003 draft map and created its own map in an interactive computer format which the American Horticultural Society now uses 5 In 2006 the Arbor Day Foundation released an update of U S hardiness zones using mostly the same data as the AHS It revised hardiness zones reflecting generally warmer recent temperatures in many parts of the country and appeared similar to the AHS 2003 draft The Foundation also did away with the more detailed a b half zone delineations 6 In 2012 the USDA updated their plant hardiness map based on 1976 2005 weather data using a longer period of data to smooth out year to year weather fluctuations 7 Two new zones 12 and 13 were added to better define and improve information sharing on tropical and semitropical plants they also appear on the maps of Hawaii and Puerto Rico There is a very small spot east of San Juan Puerto Rico that includes the airport in coastal Carolina where the mean minimum is 67 degrees F 19 C which is classified as hardiness Zone 13b the highest category with temperatures rarely below 65 F 18 C The map has a higher resolution than previous ones and is able to show local variations due to things such as elevation or large bodies of water Many zone boundaries were changed as a result of the more recent data as well as new mapping methods and additional information gathered Many areas were a half zone warmer than the previous 1990 map 8 The 2012 map was created digitally for the internet and includes a ZIP Code zone finder and an interactive map 9 10 In 2015 the Arbor Day Foundation revised another map also with no a and b subdivisions showing many areas having zones even warmer with the most notable changes in the Mid Atlantic and Northeast showing cities like Philadelphia New York City and Washington D C in zone 8 due to their urban heat islands 11 Selected U S cities Edit The USDA plant hardiness zones for selected U S cities as based on the 2012 map are the following City ZoneAlbany New York 5b 6aAlbuquerque New Mexico 7bAllentown Pennsylvania 6b 7aAnchorage Alaska 4b 5aAtlanta Georgia 8aAtlantic City New Jersey 7b 8aAttu Island Alaska 8aAustin Texas 8b 9aBaltimore Maryland 7b 8aBakersfield California 9bBoise Idaho 7aBoston Massachusetts 6b 7aBuffalo New York 6a 6bBurlington Vermont 5aCape Hatteras North Carolina 8b 9aCharleston South Carolina 8b 9aCharleston West Virginia 7aCharlotte North Carolina 7b 8aChattanooga Tennessee 7a 7bChicago Illinois 6aCincinnati Ohio 6bCleveland Ohio 6bColorado Springs Colorado 5b 6aColumbus Ohio 6a 6bDallas Texas 8a 8bDenver Colorado 5b 6aDetroit Michigan 6bEl Paso Texas 8a 8bFairbanks Alaska 2aFresno California 9bGreensboro North Carolina 7bHarrisburg Pennsylvania 7aHartford Connecticut 6bHonolulu Hawaii 12bHouston Texas 9aIndianapolis Indiana 5b 6aJacksonville Florida 9aJuneau Alaska 6b 7aKansas City Missouri 6a 6bLas Vegas Nevada 9aLittle Rock Arkansas 8aLos Angeles California 9b 10a 10bLouisville Kentucky 6b 7aMemphis Tennessee 7b 8aMiami Florida 10b 11aMilwaukee Wisconsin 6aMinneapolis Minnesota 4b 5aMontauk New York 7bNantucket Massachusetts 7a 7bNashville Tennessee 7aNew Orleans Louisiana 9bNew York New York 7a 7bNorfolk Virginia 8aOklahoma City Oklahoma 7aOmaha Nebraska 5bOrlando Florida 9bPhiladelphia Pennsylvania 7a 7bPhoenix Arizona 9b 10aPierre South Dakota 4b 5aPittsburgh Pennsylvania 6bPocatello Idaho 5bPortland Maine 5bPortland Oregon 8b 9aProvidence Rhode Island 6bQuad Cities Iowa Illinois 5bRaleigh North Carolina 7b 8aRiverside California 9bReno Nevada 7aRoanoke Virginia 7a 7bSacramento California 9bSt George Utah 8bSt Louis Missouri 6b 7aSalt Lake City Utah 7a 7bSan Antonio Texas 8b 9aSan Diego California 10b 11aSan Francisco California 10a 10bSan Jose California 9b 10aSan Juan Puerto Rico 12b 13aSavannah Georgia 8bScranton Pennsylvania 6a 6bSeattle Washington 8b 9aTampa Florida 9b 10aTucson Arizona 9bTulsa Oklahoma 7aTuscaloosa Alabama 8aUtqiaġvik Alaska 2bWashington D C 7a 7bWichita Kansas 6bLimitations Edit As the USDA system is based entirely on average annual extreme minimum temperature in an area it is limited in its ability to describe the climatic conditions a gardener may have to account for in a particular area there are many other factors that determine whether or not a given plant can survive in a given zone Zone information alone is often not adequate for predicting winter survival since factors such as frost dates and frequency of snow cover can vary widely between regions Even the extreme minimum itself may not be useful when comparing regions in widely different climate zones As an extreme example due to the Gulf stream most of the United Kingdom is in zones 8 9 while in the US zones 8 9 include regions such as the subtropical coastal areas of the southeastern US and Mojave and Chihuahuan inland deserts thus an American gardener in such an area may only have to plan for several nights of cold temperatures per year while their British counterpart may have to plan for several months In addition the zones do not incorporate any information about duration of cold temperatures summer temperatures or sun intensity insolation thus sites which may have the same mean winter minima on the few coldest nights and be in the same garden zone but have markedly different climates For example zone 8 covers coastal high latitude cool summer locations like Seattle and London as well as lower latitude subtropical hot summer climates like Charleston and Madrid Farmers gardeners and landscapers in the former two must plan for entirely different growing conditions from those in the latter in terms of length of hot weather and sun intensity Coastal Ireland and central Florida are both Zone 10 but have radically different climates 99 of the year The hardiness scales do not take into account the reliability of snow cover in the colder zones Snow acts as an insulator against extreme cold protecting the root system of hibernating plants If the snow cover is reliable the actual temperature to which the roots are exposed will not be as low as the hardiness zone number would indicate As an example Quebec City in Canada is located in zone 4 but can rely on a significant snow cover every year making it possible to cultivate plants normally rated for zones 5 or 6 But in Montreal located to the southwest in zone 5 it is sometimes difficult to cultivate plants adapted to the zone because of the unreliable snow cover citation needed Many plants may survive in a locality but will not flower if the day length is insufficient or if they require vernalization a particular duration of low temperature There are many other climate parameters that a farmer gardener or landscaper may need to take into account as well such as humidity precipitation storms rainy dry cycles or monsoons and site considerations such as soil type soil drainage and water retention water table tilt towards or away from the sun natural or manmade protection from excessive sun snow frost and wind etc The annual extreme minimum temperature is a useful indicator but ultimately only one factor among many for plant growth and survival 9 3 12 Alternatives Edit An alternative means of describing plant hardiness is to use indicator plants In this method common plants with known limits to their range are used citation needed Sunset publishes a series that breaks up climate zones more finely than the USDA zones identifying 45 distinct zones in the US incorporating ranges of temperatures in all seasons precipitation wind patterns elevation and length and structure of the growing season 13 In addition the Koppen climate classification system can be used as a more general guide to growing conditions when considering large areas of the Earth s surface or attempting to make comparisons between different continents 14 The Trewartha climate classification is often a good real world concept of climates and their relation to plants and their average growing conditions citation needed Australian hardiness zones EditThe Australian National Botanic Gardens have devised another system keeping with Australian conditions The zones are defined by steps of 5 degrees Celsius from 15 10 C for zone 1 to 15 20 C for zone 7 15 They are numerically about 6 lower than the USDA system For example Australian zone 3 is roughly equivalent to USDA zone 9 The higher Australian zone numbers had no US equivalents prior to the 2012 addition by USDA of zones 12 and 13 The spread of weather stations may be insufficient and too many places with different climates are lumped together Only 738 Australian stations have records of more than ten years one station per 98 491 hectares or 243 380 acres though more populated areas have relatively fewer hectares per station Mount Isa has three climatic stations with more than a ten year record One is in zone 4a one in zone 4b and the other is in zone 5a Sydney residents are split between zones 3a and 4b Different locations in the same city are suitable for different plants Canadian hardiness zones EditClimate variables that reflect the capacity and detriments to plant growth are used to develop an index that is mapped to Canada s Plant Hardiness Zones 16 This index comes from a formula originally developed by Ouellet and Sherk in the mid 1960s 17 18 19 The formula used is Y 67 62 1 734X1 0 1868X2 69 77X3 1 256X4 0 006119X5 22 37X6 0 01832X7where Y estimated index of suitability X1 monthly mean of the daily minimum temperatures C of the coldest month X2 mean frost free period above 0 C in days X3 amount of rainfall R from June to November inclusive in terms of R R a where a 25 4 if R is in millimeters and a 1 if R is in inches X4 monthly mean of the daily maximum temperatures C of the warmest month X5 winter factor expressed in terms of 0 C X1 Rjan where Rjan represents the rainfall in January expressed in mm X6 mean maximum snow depth in terms of S S a where a 25 4 if S is in millimeters and a 1 if S is in inches X7 maximum wind gust in km hr in 30 years City Canadian Zone 16 USDA Zone 16 Calgary 4a 4aEdmonton 4a 3bHalifax 6b 6aMontreal 6a 4bOttawa 5b 4bSaskatoon 3b 3aSt John s 6a 7aToronto 7a 5bVancouver 8b 8bWinnipeg 4a 3bYellowknife 0a 2aFor practical purposes Canada has adopted the American hardiness zone classification system The 1990 version of the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map included Canada and Mexico but they were removed with the 2012 update to focus on the United States and Puerto Rico 8 The Canadian government publishes both Canadian and USDA style zone maps 16 European hardiness zones EditUnless specifically noted all zones in this section are USDA zones Selected European cities Edit The table below provides USDA hardiness zone data for selected European cities City ZoneAmsterdam Netherlands 20 8bBarcelona Spain 21 10aBelgrade Serbia 22 7b 8aBratislava Slovakia 23 7a 7bBucharest Romania 24 7a 7bCatania Italy 25 9b 10aDublin Ireland 26 8b 9aEdinburgh Scotland UK 26 8a 8bGlasgow Scotland UK 26 8bHelsinki Finland 27 6bKaliningrad Russia 28 6b 7aKrakow Poland 29 7aLisbon Portugal 30 10bLondon England UK 26 8b 9aLjubljana Slovenia 31 7bMadrid Spain 21 9aManchester England UK 26 8bMilan Italy 25 9aMoscow Russia 28 5aParis France 32 8b 9aPortsmouth England UK 26 9aPrague Czech Republic 33 7bRiga Latvia 34 6bRome Italy 25 9bRovaniemi Finland 27 4aSarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina 35 7a 7bSimferopol Ukraine 36 6bSochi Russia 28 9aStockholm Sweden 37 7a 7bTallinn Estonia 38 6a 6bTuapse Russia 28 8bTrondheim Norway 39 7bValencia Spain 21 10aVienna Austria 40 7b 8aVorkuta Russia 28 2a 2bWarsaw Poland 29 6bZurich Switzerland 41 7b 8aAntwerp Belgium 42 8aBelfast Northern Ireland UK 26 8a 8b 9aBerlin Germany 43 7aBirmingham England UK 26 8bCardiff Wales UK 26 8b 9aCopenhagen Denmark 44 8a 8bDusseldorf Germany 43 8aFunchal Portugal 30 11b 12aGdansk Poland 29 7aHamburg Germany 43 7bIstanbul Turkey 45 8a 8b 9a 9bLa Coruna Spain 21 10bLas Palmas Spain 21 12a 12bMarseille France 32 9a 9bMinsk Belarus 46 5aMunich Germany 43 6bMurmansk Russia 28 4aNewcastle England UK 26 8a 8bNicosia Cyprus 47 9bOslo Norway 39 7aPalermo Italy 25 10b 11aPlymouth England UK 26 9a 9bPorto Portugal 30 10aPoznan Poland 29 6bReykjavik Iceland 48 7b 8aSaint Petersburg Russia 28 5aSimrishamn Sweden 37 8aSofia Bulgaria 49 6b 7aStrasbourg France 32 8aThessaloniki Greece 50 8b 9aTromso Norway 39 7a 7bUmea Sweden 37 5a 5bValletta Malta 51 10bVilnius Lithuania 52 5bWroclaw Poland 29 6bZagreb Croatia 53 7b 8aYalta Ukraine 54 9aBritain and Ireland Edit USDA zones do not work particularly well in the UK as they are designed for continental climates and subtropical climates 55 The high latitude weaker solar intensity and cooler UK summers must be considered when comparing to US equivalent New growth may be insufficient or fail to harden off affecting winter survival in the shorter and much cooler UK summers 55 Britain and Ireland s hardiness zones USDA scale 2006 Owing to the moderating effect of the North Atlantic Current on the Irish and British temperate maritime climate Britain and Ireland even more so have milder winters than their northerly position would otherwise afford This means that the USDA hardiness zones relevant to Britain and Ireland are quite high from 7 to 10 as shown below 56 In Scotland the Grampians Northwest Highlands and locally in the Southern Uplands in England the Pennines and in Wales the highest part of Snowdonia Most of England Wales and Scotland parts of central Ireland and Snaefell on the Isle of Man Most of western and southern England and Wales western Scotland also a very narrow coastal fringe on the east coast of Scotland and northeast England within 5 km 3 1 mi of the North Sea London the West Midlands Urban Area most of Ireland and most of the Isle of Man Very low lying coastal areas of the southwest of Ireland and the Isles of Scilly In 2012 the United Kingdom s Royal Horticultural Society introduced new hardiness ratings for plants not places These run from H7 the hardiest tolerant of temperatures below 20 C 4 F to H1a needing temperatures above 15 C 59 F 57 The RHS hardiness ratings are based on absolute minimum winter temperatures in C rather than the long term average annual extreme minimum temperatures that define USDA zones 57 Scandinavia and Baltic Sea Region Edit Scandinavia lies at the same latitude as Alaska or Greenland but the effect of the warm North Atlantic Current is even more pronounced here than it is in Britain and Ireland Save for a very small spot near Karasjok Norway which is in zone 2 nowhere in the Arctic part of Scandinavia gets below zone 3 The Faroe Islands at 62 63 N are in zone 8 as are the outer Lofoten Islands at 68 N Tromso a coastal city in Norway at 70 N is in zone 7 and even Longyearbyen the northernmost true city in the world at 78 N is still in zone 4 All these coastal locations have one thing in common though which are cool damp summers with temperatures rarely exceeding 20 C 68 F or 15 C 59 F in Longyearbyen This shows the importance of taking heat zones into account for better understanding of what may or may not grow A garden in Simrishamn southern Sweden In Sweden and Finland generally at sea level to 500 metres 1 600 ft zone 3 is north of the Arctic Circle including cities like Karesuando and Pajala Kiruna is the major exception here which being located on a hill above frost traps is in zone 5 Zone 4 lies between the Arctic Circle and about 64 66 N with cities such as Oulu Rovaniemi and Jokkmokk zone 5 south to 61 62 N contains cities such as Tampere Umea and Ostersund Zone 6 covers the south of mainland Finland Sweden north of 60 N and the high plateau of Smaland further south Here one will find cities such as Gavle Orebro Sundsvall and Helsinki Aland as well as coastal southern Sweden and the Stockholm area are in zone 7 The west coast of Sweden Gothenburg and southwards enjoys particularly mild winters and lies in zone 7 therefore being friendly to some hardy exotic species found for example in the Gothenburg Botanical Garden the southeast coast of Sweden has a colder winter due to the absence of the Gulf Stream Denmark is in zones 9a 8b and 8a 58 Estonia is divided to warmer West and North coast Tallinn 6b Haapsalu 7b Kardla 7a Kuressaare 7a Paide 6a Rakvere 6a Narva 6a Viljandi 6b and colder inland Tartu 5a Valga 5a Voru 5a Latvia s capital Riga is in zone 6b The country is in zones 5a 5b 6a 6b 7a and 7b Lithuania s capital Vilnius is in zone 5b The country is in zones 5b 6a 6b and 7a 52 Central Europe Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Central Europe hardiness zones 59 Central Europe is a good example of a transition from an oceanic climate to a continental climate which reflects in the tendency of the hardiness zones to decrease mainly eastwards instead of northwards Also the plateaus and low mountain ranges in this region have a significant impact on how cold it might get during winter Generally speaking the hardiness zones are high considering the latitude of the region although not as high as Northern Europe with the Shetland Islands where zone 9 extends to over 60 N In Central Europe the relevant zones decrease from zone 8 on the Belgian Dutch and German North Sea coast with the exception of some of the Frisian Islands notably Vlieland and Terschelling the island of Helgoland and some of the islands in the Rhine Scheldt estuary which are in zone 9 to zone 5 around Suwalki Podlachia on the far eastern border between Poland and Lithuania Some isolated high elevation areas of the Alps and Carpathians may even go down to zone 3 or 4 An extreme example of a cold sink is Funtensee Bavaria which is at least in zone 3 Another notable example is Waksmund a small village in the Polish Carpathians which regularly reaches 35 C 31 F during winter on calm nights when cold and heavy airmasses from the surrounding Gorce and Tatra Mountains descend down the slopes to this low lying valley creating extremes which can be up to 10 C 18 F colder than nearby Nowy Targ or Bialka Tatrzanska which are both higher up in elevation Waksmund is in zone 3b while nearby Krakow only 80 km 50 mi to the north and 300 m 980 ft lower is in zone 6a These examples prove that local topography can have a pronounced effect on temperature and thus on what is possible to grow in a specific region 60 Southern Europe Edit The southern European marker plant for climate as well as cultural indicator is the olive tree which cannot withstand long periods below freezing so its cultivation area matches the cool winter zone The Mediterranean Sea acts as a temperature regulator so this area is generally warmer than other parts of the continent except in mountainous areas where the sea effect lowers it belongs in zones 8 10 however southern Balkans mountainous Western and Eastern Serbia continental Croatia and Bulgaria are colder in winter and are in zones 6 7 The Croatian Dalmatian coast Albania and northern Greece are in zones 8 9 as are central northern Italy hills and some spots in Po Valley are however colder and southern France Central Iberia is 8 9 some highland areas are slightly colder The Spanish and Portuguese Atlantic coast much of Andalusia and Murcia coastal and slightly inland southern Valencian Community a part of coastal Catalonia the Balearic Islands southwestern Sardinia most of Sicily coastal southern Italy some areas around Albania 61 62 coastal Cyprus and southwestern Greece are in zone 10 In Europe the zone 11a is limited only to a few spots In the Iberian Peninsula it can be found on the southern coast namely in populated Spanish areas such as the cities of Almeria Adra Nerja Malaga Marbella and in a strip of coastal land between Tarifa and Punta Carnero in the province of Cadiz 63 In Portugal zone 11a can be found in the Southwest on a few unpopulated sites around the municipalities of Lagos and Vila do Bispo 64 In Greece zone 11a can be found in areas of Crete Karpathos and Antiparos islands 65 The Mediterranean islands of Malta Lampedusa and Linosa belong to zone 11a as well as a few areas on the southernmost coast of Cyprus citation needed The Balkan area is also more prone to cold snaps and episodes of unseasonable warmth For instance despite having similar daily means and temperature amplitudes to Nantucket Massachusetts for each month Sarajevo has recorded below freezing temperatures in every month of the year 66 67 Macaronesia EditMacaronesia consists of four archipelagos The Azores the Canary Islands Cape Verde and Madeira At lower altitudes and coastal areas the Portuguese Azores and Madeira belong to zones 11a 11b and 11b 12a respectively The Azores range from 9a to 11b and Madeira ranges from 9b to 12a 9a and 9b found inland on the highest altitudes such as the Mount Pico in the Azores or Pico Ruivo in Madeira 68 The Spanish Canary Islands hardiness zones range from 8a to 12b depending on the location and the altitude The islands are generally part of zones 11b 12a in lower altitudes and coastal areas reaching up to 12b in populated coastal parts such as the city of Las Palmas The lowest hardiness areas are found in Teide National Park being at 8a 8b for its very high altitude The Teide peak is the highest peak of Macaronesia 63 The Cape Verde islands inside the Tropics have hardiness zones that range from 12 to 13 in the coastal areas while the lowest hardiness zone is found in the island of Fogo in the country s highest peak Pico do Fogo citation needed American Horticultural Society heat zones EditIn addition to the USDA Hardiness zones there are American Horticultural Society AHS heat zones The criterion is the average number of days per year when the temperature exceeds 30 C 86 F The AHS Heat Zone Map for the US is available on the American Horticultural Society website 69 Zone From To1 lt 12 1 73 8 144 15 305 31 456 46 607 61 908 91 1209 121 15010 151 18011 181 21012 gt 210South Africa EditSouth Africa has five horticultural or climatic zones The zones are defined by minimum temperature 70 Effects of climate change EditThe USDA map published in 2012 shows that most of the US has become a half zone 2 8 C or 5 F hotter in winter compared to the 1990 release 8 Research in 2016 suggests that USDA plant hardiness zones will shift even further northward under climate change 71 See also Edit Gardening portal Plants portalAgriculture Gardening Geographical zone Hardiness plants SubtropicsReferences Edit Fernald M L 1927 Rehder Alfred ed Rehder s Manual of Cultivated Trees and Shrubs Rhodora 29 339 48 51 JSTOR 23298457 Wyman Donald 1938 Hedges Screens amp Windbreaks Their Uses Selection and Care McGraw Hill a b History of Plant Hardiness Zone Maps The Rest of the Story Plant Delights Nursery Retrieved 2018 06 03 Del Tredici Peter 1990 The New USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map PDF Arnoldia 50 3 16 20 via Harvard University USDA Hardiness Zone Map American Horticultural Society Archived from the original on 8 December 2017 Retrieved 8 December 2017 New arborday org Hardiness Zone Map reflects warmer climate Latest hardiness zones based on most current temperature data available suggest up to date choices for best trees to plant Archived from the original on 2007 12 28 Retrieved 2007 12 27 USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map 2012 Agricultural Research Service U S Department of Agriculture Archived from the original on 24 October 2017 Retrieved 7 December 2017 a b c What s New USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map Agricultural Research Service U S Department of Agriculture Archived from the original on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 7 December 2017 a b About USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map planthardiness ars usda gov Retrieved 2021 12 22 History of USDA Hardiness Zones alugy com Retrieved 2021 12 22 Hardiness Zone Map at arborday org www arborday org McKenney Daniel W Pedlar John H Lawrence Kevin Campbell Kathy Hutchinson Michael F 2007 12 01 Beyond Traditional Hardiness Zones Using Climate Envelopes to Map Plant Range Limits BioScience 57 11 929 937 doi 10 1641 B571105 ISSN 1525 3244 Sunset National Garden Book Sunset Books Inc Menlo Park California 1997 Koppen Wladimir Translated by Volken E and Bronninmann S Die Warmezonen der Erde nach der Dauer der heissen gemassigten und kalten Zeit und nach der Wirkung der Warme auf die organische Welt betrachtet The thermal zones of the Earth according to the duration of hot moderate and cold periods and of the impact of heat on the organic world PDF World Maps of Koppen Geiger Climate Classification Meteorologische Zeitschrift Vol 20 No 3 351 360 Retrieved 24 September 2019 Dawson I 1991 Plant Hardiness Zones for Australia Archived from the original on 2010 12 10 Retrieved 2010 11 11 a b c d Natural Resources Canada Plant Hardiness of Canada Natural Resources Canada Plant Hardiness of Canada Government of Canada Archived from the original on 29 June 2006 Retrieved 7 April 2018 Ouellet C E Sherk L C 1967 Woody Ornamental Plant Zonation I Indices of Winterhardiness Canadian Journal of Plant Science 47 3 231 238 doi 10 4141 cjps67 044 ISSN 0008 4220 pdf Ouellet C E Sherk L C 1967 Woody Ornamental Plant Zonation Ii Suitability Indices of Localities Canadian Journal of Plant Science 47 4 339 349 doi 10 4141 cjps67 064 ISSN 0008 4220 pdf Ouellet C E Sherk L C 1967 Woody Ornamental Plant Zonation III Suitability Map for the Probable Winter Survival of Ornamental Trees and Shrubs Canadian Journal of Plant Science 47 4 351 358 doi 10 4141 cjps67 065 ISSN 0008 4220 pdf Netherlands Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 31 a b c d e Spain Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Serbia Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Slovakia Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Romania Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c d Italy Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c d e f g h i j k Plant Cold Hardiness Zone Map of the British Isles www trebrown com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b Finland Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c d e f g Russia Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c d e Poland Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c Portugal Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Slovenia Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c France Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Czech Republic Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Latvia Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Bosnia and Herzegovina Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Page 3 USDA ARS www ars usda gov Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c Sweden Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Estonia Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c Norway Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Austria Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Switzerland Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Belgium Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b c d Wetter und Klima Deutscher Wetterdienst Climate Atlas www dwd de Retrieved 2021 05 30 Denmark Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Bitki Soguga ve Sicaga Dayaniklilik www mgm gov tr Retrieved 2021 05 30 Belarus Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Cyprus Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Iceland Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Bulgaria Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Greek Plant Hardiness Zones hardiness inforest gr Retrieved 2021 05 30 Malta Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b meteo lt Atsiaurumo zonos Lietuvoje Lietuvos hidrometeorologijos tarnyba 2022 05 09 Croatia Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 2021 05 30 Page 3 USDA ARS www ars usda gov Retrieved 2021 05 30 a b Martin Crawford 2010 Creating a forest garden working with nature to grow edible crops Green Books p 13 ISBN 9781900322621 United Kingdom Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com a b RHS hardiness rating RHS hardiness rating Royal Horticultural Society Archived from the original on 25 September 2016 Retrieved 24 September 2016 Denmark Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map www plantmaps com Archived from the original on 11 October 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Hardiness Zones of Europe Gardenia net Retrieved 2022 12 05 HobbySeeds www hobbyseeds com Retrieved 2022 12 05 Teqja Zydi Map of Albanian plant hardiness zones based on the WorldClim data for the 1950 2000 period Retrieved 16 February 2021 Teqja Zydi Libohova Zamir Kopali Albert Naci Robert Climatic hardiness and heat zones of Albania and their use in evaluating the potential of introducing new plant species Retrieved 16 February 2021 a b LAS PLANTAS ORNAMENTALES Y SUS ZONAS DE RUSTICIDAD EN ESPANA PDF Jose Manuel Sanchez de Lorenzo Caceres Agricultural Engineer 2004 Hardiness zones of Portugal PDF Repositorio Institucional da Universidade de Lisboa pp 60 62 Home hardiness inforest gr MA Nantucket MEM AP National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved February 19 2015 Weather and Climate The Climate of Sarajevo in Russian Weather and Climate Pogoda i klimat Archived from the original on 16 May 2012 Retrieved 25 August 2016 Portugal Interactive Plant Hardiness Zone Map plantmaps com Retrieved 23 June 2021 AHS Plant Heat Zone Map American Horticultural Society Archived from the original on 2017 05 16 Retrieved 2017 05 26 PlantZAfrica 2016 Horticultural Zones Parker Lauren E Abatzoglou John T 2016 Projected changes in cold hardiness zones and suitable overwinter ranges of perennial crops over the United States Environmental Research Letters 11 3 034001 doi 10 1088 1748 9326 11 3 034001 ISSN 1748 9326 Bibliography Edit PlantZAfrica SANBI Retrieved 14 November 2016 External links EditFreeze Frost data from NOAA Data on plant hardiness in Ireland Plant Hardiness Data Canada Plant Hardiness Zones of Canada Interactive Map Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hardiness zone amp oldid 1131573451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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