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    New federal map for what to plant reflects warming

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Global warming is hitting not just home, but garden. The government's colorful map of planting zones, most often seen on the back of seed packets, is changing, illustrating a hotter 21st century.

    An update of the official guide for 80 million gardeners reflects a new reality: The coldest day of the year isn't as cold as it used to be. So some plants and trees that once seemed too vulnerable to cold can now survive farther north.

    It's the first time since 1990 that the U.S. Department of Agriculture has updated the map and much has changed. Nearly entire states, such as Ohio, Nebraska and Texas, are in warmer zones.

    The new guide, unveiled Wednesday at the National Arboretum, also uses better weather data and offers more interactive technology. For the first time it takes into factors such as how cities are hotter than suburbs and rural areas, nearby large bodies of water, prevailing winds, and the slope of land.

    "It truly does reflect state of the art," said USDA chief scientist Catherine Woteki.

    Gardeners can register their zip code into the online map and their zone will pop up. It shows the exact average coldest temperature for each zip code. The 26 zones, however, are based on five degree increments.

    For example, Des Moines, Iowa, used to be in zone 5a, meaning the lowest temperature on average was between minus 15 and minus 20 degrees Fahrenheit. Now it's 5b, which has a coldest temperature of 10 to 15 degrees below zero.

    "People who grow plants are well aware of the fact that temperatures have gotten more mild throughout the year, particularly in the winter time," said Boston University biology professor Richard Primack. "There's a lot of things you can grow now that you couldn't grow before."

    He uses the giant fig tree in his suburban Boston yard as an example.

    "People don't think of figs as a crop you can grow in the Boston area. You can do it now," he said.

    In the old 1990 map, the USDA mentions 34 different U.S. cities on its key. Eighteen of those, including Honolulu, St. Louis, Des Moines, St. Paul and even Fairbanks, are in newer warmer zones. Agriculture officials said they didn't examine the map to see how much of the map has changed for the hotter. But Mark Kaplan, the New York meteorologist who co-created the 1990 map and a 2003 update that the USDA didn't use, said the latest version clearly shows warmer zones migrating north. Other experts agreed.

    The 1990 map was based on temperatures from 1974 to 1986; the new map from 1976 to 2005. The nation's average temperature from 1976 to 2005 was two-thirds of a degree warmer than for the old time period, according to statistics at the National Climatic Data Center.

    USDA spokeswoman Kim Kaplan, who was part of the map team, repeatedly tried to distance the new zones in the map from global warming issues. She said even though much of the country is in warmer zones, the map "is simply not a good instrument" to demonstrate climate change because it is based on just the coldest days of the year.

    David W. Wolfe, professor of plant and soil ecology in Cornell University's Department of Horticulture said the USDA is being too cautious and disagrees with Kaplan about whether this reflects warming.

    "At a time when the 'normal' climate has become a moving target, this revision of the hardiness zone map gives us a clear picture of the 'new normal,' and will be an essential tool for gardeners, farmers, and natural resource managers as they begin to cope with rapid climate change," Wolfe said in an email.

    Another and even more dramatic sign of global warming in the plant world is that spring is arriving earlier in the year, Wolfe said.

    The new map is based on temperature records

    An earlier effort to update the planting map caused a bit of an uproar when the USDA in 2003 decided not to use an updated map that reflected warmer weather. Kaplan said the 2003 map wasn't interactive enough.

    The Arbor Day Foundation later issued its own hardiness guide that had the toastier climate zones. The new federal map is very similar to the one the private plant group adopted six years ago, said Arbor Day Foundation Vice President Woodrow Nelson.

    "We got a lot of comments that the 1990 map wasn't accurate anymore," Nelson said. "I look forward to (the new map). It's been a long time coming."

    Nelson, who lives in Lincoln, Neb., where the zone warmed to a 5b. Nelson said he used to "a solid 4" but now he's got Japanese maples and fraser firs in his yard — trees that shouldn't survive in a zone 4.

    In Des Moines, Jerry Holub, a manager for the Earl May Nursery chain, doesn't think the warmer zone will have much of an impact on gardeners. But he said this may mean residents can even try passion flowers.

    "Now you can put them in safely, when you couldn't before," he said.

    Vaughn Speer, an 87-year-old master gardener in Ames, Iowa, doubts the change in zones will mean much to him, but he said he has seen redbud trees, one of the earliest blooming trees, a little further north in recent years.

    "They always said redbuds don't go beyond U.S. Highway 30, but I'm seeing them near Roland," he said, referring to a small Iowa town about 10 miles north of the highway that spans central Iowa.

    ___

    AP Writer Michael J. Crumb contributed to this report from Des Moines.

    ___

    Online:

    Plant map: http://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/

     

    95 comments

    • safeinthewoods  •  28 days ago
      ... hemp grows just about anywhere ...
    • Trillions in debt  •  28 days ago
      In 30 years Maine and Idaho will exchange barbs over oranges and bananas.
    • Mike  •  Valley Springs, California  •  28 days ago
      Anyone who does not believe in climate change, go talk to a farmer, they deal with it everyday. Few people, other than researchers, have as much experience in dealing with climate change than our farmers.
    • Awry  •  28 days ago
      I've lived in the same place for 22 years. During that time, it has become possible to plant crops like corn, beans, and crops normally planted about April 21st three weeks earlier without any problems and last year, I planted a month early, no problem.
      I have no explanation as far as why, but anyone who doesn't know it's warming isn't paying attention.
    • hen  •  Cleveland, Georgia  •  28 days ago
      do i need to go north or south georgia to plant weed
    • AwakeAlertOrientedx3  •  28 days ago
      I am having to adjust the planting and harvesting seasons for my marijuana crop.
    • Draco  •  Oak Ridge, Tennessee  •  28 days ago
      This reflects what I have known about the climate here in Tennessee where I have successfully planted palms and cycads where we have experienced Zone 8 conditions where the former map read zone 6 but we don't see that kind of cold around here often. Horticulturally this information is very important for agriculture and floriculture and forcast are an important element of planning crop sowing and harvesting and where to plant the various trees and shrubs for the landscaping industry. This new reality will offer many more oppurtunities for the industry and hopefully more in way of growth and prosperity for its dependants.
    • Rickie  •  28 days ago
      Get ready to plant mangoes in Montana...
    • Empirical  •  28 days ago
      All those that don't "believe" in human caused global warming, fine. But where is your evidence for your position? There is little, and very few scientists who agree with you. The majority of scientists and the preponderance of evidence support the other side of the story. Even the theory of evolution has its detractors, yet that doesn't mean it isn't fact.
    • Frank  •  28 days ago
      If you read hobby magazines for mountain climbing you see lots of reports on how glaciers are shrinking. I've read lots of news stories about birds migrating earler, plants blooming earlier, permafrost melting, and sea ice going away in the Arctic so yachts can sail through waters formerly requiring powerful ice breakers. Then you've got insurance companies that think global warming driven weather costs them money, the Pentagon and American intelligence agencies which see global climate change destabilizing third world countries and causing more work for them, and a big rush to control an ice free Arctic Ocean. Your water supplier probably thinks global warming will impact your water supply and as the ice recedes in Greenland new mines are being opened. The new map for planting will be examined by a few million gardners who will judge it's accuracy. It will almost certainly be further proof that deniers don't pay attention to facts that go against their pet causes. You know a man's best friend is his dogma.
    • Mr. Nice Guy  •  28 days ago
      All the Co2 that took millions of years to collect in the ground;... Releasing it in just 150 years of the industrial revolution has to have an effect on the biosphere. Thus the greenhouse effect is a fact; not a guess; not a conspiracy....unless the conspiracy is the survival of mankind.
      Please don't correct me, I don't like it; because I am right.
    • E.  •  28 days ago
      I wonder if the Inca farmers of many centuries ago noticed year-by-year changes in the weather. And did they bring their worries to the "politicians" of the day, the high priests?

      I reckon they would get the same responses: mockery, denial, inaction, even violence; that is offered today from vested interest lobbyists, and much of the Republican party.

      But anyway... their crops failed, people starved, trade collapsed, civilisation pretty well expired.

      So, the big question is: Will we learn anything from history; or just repeat it, on a far grander scale?
    • Mr. Nice Guy  •  28 days ago
      I hope you uneducated armchair scientists are right; with all your conspiracy research, hunches, distrust of scientific method and teenage rebellion directed at "The Man"..
      Because I really don't want to believe the billions of pieces of data from the scientific research over many years.
      Also if you think global warming is bad; just try global cooling.
    • Eric1  •  27 days ago
      Right now, here in RI, I have snowdrops in bloom, and daffodils about to bloom as well.
    • Eric1  •  27 days ago
      Don't 'believe' in global warming? Take your 'arguments' to Burgess Seed!
    • Americans First  •  28 days ago
      A few nights ago I was in my yard looking at the stars and the motion light by my shop came on. I looked, didn't see anything, looked again and saw a tree frog hopping across the driveway. It's the middle of January in Eastern Oklahoma! In 47 years I've never seen a frog outside this time of year before.
    • Mike  •  Temecula, California  •  28 days ago
      Even if you don't think global climate change is happening, pollution IS. So when you belly ache about "the science" of global change, you are dismissing the cold hard facts that we are polluting the air, land and water. So even if you DO NOT think the atmosphere is getting hotter, it's still getting more and more polluted which. The remedy for global warming AND for pollution is the same. We need to stop burning fossil fuels for everything.
    • Honey Badger  •  28 days ago
      Ever notice how the people who deny global warming the hardest are the most religious? I wonder why that is.
    • Digger  •  28 days ago
      Fig trees couldn't grow in Boston in the past? He has a giant fig tree in his front yard in Boston? How long ago did all this warming happen?
    • Bob  •  Staunton, Virginia  •  28 days ago
      "Global Warming" is a misnomer. It is global climate destabilization. Food will NOT be uniformly easier to grow due to increased floods, drought, high wind and other manifestations of unstable climate. All due to increased heat generally.
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