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2023 USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Maps Out


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Posted
7 hours ago, Desert DAC said:

Thanks for those links, I'll dig in to them. Something I notice is how many people assume the USDA cold hardiness zones use only weather station data. It also uses PRISM (Oregon State Univ.) climate / terrain modeling, which is good, but it is in no way without some issues. It makes some questionable inferences and assumptions about thermal belts (warm slopes) here in the west that do not line up with reality, let alone extreme cold events where thermal belts and microclimates can really break down - wind advection.

I also don't know if PRISM verifies their initial mapping of zones with various state or local meteorology and horticultural people, but even that can be good and bad - bad when there's a local bias or agenda that some places have.

Here's a great climate zone mapping system for Florida, layering USDA cold hardiness zones over Florida native plant communities:

https://www.fann.org/plant-communities/

That's a very detailed map, I like it. Do they do this for all states or is this just a Florida map done within and for Florida?

  • Upvote 1
Posted

That map i think is just done for florida, but is off in spots now for the hardiness zones. The plant communities are really good though, and show how the state changes and why some palms do not grow further south that do well north in Central Florida.  That hardiness map is a good major freeze map though, so useful for planning how bad it can get.

  • Upvote 3
Posted
On 1/13/2025 at 6:40 AM, Zone7Bpalmguy said:

That's a very detailed map, I like it. Do they do this for all states or is this just a Florida map done within and for Florida?

I plan on adapting something like that for the southwestern states, but will probably start with New Mexico and surrounding states, especially adjacent areas of Texas.

  • Like 1

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