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sherwood_botsford

Zone requirements for douglas fir naturalization

I often buy surplus seedlings from various BC producers for my tree farm, here in Alberta. One company, PRT has the goodness to publish the BGC zone that the seedlings were intended for.

I, of course, am moving them out of zone, so I have to make some guesses based on the zone information as to the probability of their survival.

My latest round is using the file:

http://cfcg.forestry.ubc.ca/resources/cataloguing-in-situ-genetic-resources/subzonevariant-climate-data/

I've been examining two lots of douglas fir, one labeled IDF dk2 and the other just SBS

General documention of SBS is that it is a colder zone than IDF. So I checked it out first.

Now I'm puzzled.
The second lower case letter is for temperature (generally. some exceptions for coastal...) going h, w, m, k, c for hot, warm, moderate, kool, and cold.
Yet the average for the warms is higher than the average for the hots.

But the differences in all the characteristics are pretty small.

So now I go to

http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hre/becweb/resources/classificationreports/subzones/index.html

And download the chunk for SBF Now on page 214 of that document doug fir has the dominant or subdominant bar for dh, dw, mh, and mw, and NO other appearance at all. Not even the tiny .1 -1% category. Temperature differences between subzones is about half a degree C.

Given the tiny temperature differences between subzones, there would seem to be either:

* A factor that the climate data doesn't capture about the differences between SBS subzones
* Some tipping point factor for either the survival or propagation of doug fir.

Can you tell me:
A: Why does douglas fir grow so well in 'h' zones, nearly as well in 'w' zones, and not at all in 'm' and 'k' zones. (A link to a relevant web page would be fine)
B: Is attempting to grow douglas fir near Edmonton a waste of my time and money? At first blush my climate norms are close to those of SDF, but the firs seem to thing that there is a big difference between.

(In passing: Climate warming is going to happen, barring a nuclear winter, or a large asteroid strike. I am deliberately trying to push the envelope and attempting to grow things that nominally don't belong. I am successful with ponderosa pine, partial success with Veitch fir, and have a test run of 1200 concolor fir using a seed source from the San Juan National Forest at the 7.5 to 9000 foot level. Figuring, if it can associate with engleman spruce, it might do well here.)

Here is a link that might be useful: BEC web subzones.

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