Climate zones are the fastest and easiest way to find out if a given plant will grow in your garden. There are a handful of types of zones solving different problems or giving different information, showing different limitations. At desert-tropicals.com, we are using 3:
The USDA zone, AHS zone, and Sunset zone.
It is probably the most frequently used in the world. The concept is fairly simple, many plants die in winter when the temperature gets too cold for them. The USDA zone is based on the average minimum temperature. The table 1 shows the temperature equivalent of the different zones.
This system has the advantage of being simple. Finding out your zone is generally fairly easy, even if you are in an area outside the United States. It is well adapted to the temperate and subtropical areas.
The main problem is that it doesn’t take in account the humidity and difference of temperature between day and night. For instance, an area in Arizona that would be in zone 9a might reach 20°F (-7°C) on a cold night, this cold temperature might last a couple of hours, and early afternoon the temperature might reach 50°F (10°C). By contrast an area in zone 9a in England might go down to 20°F (-7°C) but stay below freezing all day. Obviously, the plants resisting in Arizona, might get promptly destroyed in England.
Another problem is related to summer temperature. The summer temperature of this hypothetical Arizona situation will probably reach 100°F (38°C) at least a couple of weeks in summer, cooking plants that would do just fine in the English location.
In summary, USDA is a quick valuable reference, but should be correlated to other data.
For more information and to check your zone on maps of North America visit the
USDA site.For Canada only you can try
icangarden.com.You can also find a map of Europe showing the zones at the
Nature Node, and at Palms and Gardens of the South of EuropeA variety of maps are available on the internet, even areas like
China (from Plantapalm.com), South America (Brandt’s palm site), or Australia.
|
USDA Zone (1990) |
Temperature (Celsius) |
Temperature (Fahrenheit) |
USDA Zone (1960) |
|
Zone 1 |
-45.6 and below |
below -50 |
Zone 1 |
|
Zone 2a |
-42.8 to -45.5 |
-45 to -50 |
Zone 2 |
|
Zone 2b |
-40.0 to -42.7 |
-40 to -45 | |
|
Zone 3a |
-37.3 to -39.9 |
-35 to -40 |
Zone 3 |
|
Zone 3b |
-34.5 to -37.2 |
-30 to -35 | |
|
Zone 4a |
-31.7 to -34.4 |
-25 to -30 |
Zone 4 |
|
Zone 4b |
-28.9 to -31.6 |
-20 to -25 | |
|
Zone 5a |
-26.2 to -28.8 |
-15 to -20 |
Zone 5 |
|
Zone 5b |
-23.4 to -26.1 |
-10 to -15 | |
|
Zone 6a |
-20.6 to -23.3 |
-5 to -10 |
Zone 6 |
|
Zone 6b |
-17.8 to -20.5 |
0 to -5 | |
|
Zone 7a |
-15.0 to -17.7 |
5 to 0 |
Zone 7 |
|
Zone 7b |
-12.3 to -14.9 |
10 to 5 | |
|
Zone 8a |
-9.5 to -12.2 |
15 to 10 |
Zone 8 |
|
Zone 8b |
-6.7 to -9.4 |
20 to 15 | |
|
Zone 9a |
-3.9 to -6.6 |
25 to 20 |
Zone 9 |
|
Zone 9b |
-1.2 to -3.8 |
30 to 25 | |
|
Zone 10a |
1.6 to -1.1 |
35 to 30 |
Zone 10 |
|
Zone 10b |
4.4 to 1.7 |
40 to 35 | |
|
Zone 11 |
4.5 and above |
40 and above |
Zone 11 |
To compensate for the shortcomings of the USDA cold hardiness zones, the American Horticultural Society introduced in 1997 another climate zone system called the AHS Heat zones.
The AHS compiled US Weather Bureau data for several years and
calculated the average number of days per year in each location where the high
temperature exceeded 86°F (30°C). The theory is that above that temperature,
many plants will start suffering, and some plants are either better adapted than
others to grow under high temperature conditions, or actually need these high
temperatures. The zones go from 1 with no day above 86°F to zone 12 with 210 or
more days.
It is better used as a supplement to the USDA zone. It is unfortunately less
common, and it might be difficult to 1) locate in which zone you belong, and 2)
finding reliable data on the plant you are looking for.
You can get more
information on the
Because of the shortcomings of the USDA Zones, many Western US gardeners and farmers use the so-called "Sunset Zones." The Sunset Zones (or more accurately, the Generalized Western Plantclimate Zones) are based on and adapted from the California Plant climates developed by the University of California Cooperative Extension. These are often called Sunset Zones after
the Sunset New Western Garden Book (Lane Publishing Co). Both this book and its alter ego for the whole USA, the National Garden Book are very useful encyclopedias at extremely reasonable costs. They factor in length of growing season, timing and amount of rainfall, winter lows, summer highs, and humidity.The zones from 1 to 24 are for the western USA (1 is the coldest), and the zones 25 to 45 are for the eastern part (45 is the coldest). In Arizona, Phoenix is zone 13, and Tucson is zone 12.
In the plant information of Desert-Tropicals.com, if it says that a given plant will grow from zone 8-18, it probably means that I am missing the data for the east coast zone data. It generally does not mean that the plant doesn't grow on the east coast.
You can find a description of the zones for the USA at the DigitalSeed site.
Unfortunately, information about these zones is pretty sparse and I haven’t found any similar data for Europe, Asia or Australia
Although these zones give very valuable information, they don’t take in account local variations or micro-climates. They tend to be conservative, so if you want to grow a plant that is normally growing in your area, they might give you clues about which part of your garden might be better, and what special care is needed. The bottom line is that observation of what grows in your neighborhood, and experimentation will be your ultimate guide.
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