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- Path: sparky!uunet!sun-barr!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!rpi!batcomputer!munnari.oz.au!uniwa!uniwa!nfm
- From: arkdr@uniwa.uwa.edu.au (Dave Rindos)
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Re: List of cold climate gums
- Date: 19 Nov 1992 09:11:27 +0800
- Organization: The University of Western Australia
- Lines: 27
- Message-ID: <1eepk0INNao9@uniwa.uwa.edu.au>
- References: <1992Nov16.150346.90607@vaxc.cc.monash.edu.au> <fVnEMwN@quack.sac.ca.us> <1992Nov18.232915.8173@sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: uniwa.uwa.edu.au
-
- In this discusssion, I think we are acting as if the minimum recorded
- temperature on a thermometer were the critical factor in cold hardiness.
- It strikes me that this leaves out a much more important factor: the
- duration of the cold temperature itself.
-
- In much of the the US (continental climate and all that), the winters
- are not only cold, but consistently cold. Day and night temperatures
- stay low with little fluctuation. Taking Canberra, in contrast, the day
- temperatures -- even in winter -- tend to be fairly high. Hence, the
- minimum recorded temperature is at that low level for only a relatively
- short period of time. Hence, plant tissues (say in the trunk of a
- tree) will NOT have a chance to go as low as air temperatures. In most
- of the US, in strong contrast, the minima are maintained for a long
- enough time to effect the plants the same way a much lower temperature
- for a shorter period of time would. Or at least this seems probable.
-
- It would seem to me that using PLANT SPECIES as indicators of climate is
- much more reasonable than using thermometers. For example, is a
- particular gum as cold hardy as a Lemon, or an Orange, or a Mango? For
- a gum to grown in the colder parts of the US it would have to be *much*
- hardier than a Lemon. Indeed, I find the average ozzie astonished that
- citrus can be grown in only very very limited regions in the US (e.g.
- you can't even grow lemons in most of the south-eastern states, save the
- more southern parts of Florida!); Lemons do just fine even in "cool"
- places such as Melbourne.
-
- Dave
-