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Growing degree day

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Growing degree days (GDD) are a heuristic tool in phenology. GDD are used by horticulturists and gardeners to predict the date that a flower will bloom or a crop reach maturity.

Absent extreme conditions such as unseasonal drought or disease, plants grow in a cumulative stepwise manner which is strongly influenced by the ambient temperature. Growing degree days take aspects of local weather into account and allow gardeners to predict (or, in greenhouses, even to control) the plants’ pace toward maturity.

GDD calculation

GDD are calculated by taking the average of the daily high and low temperature each day compared to a baseline (usually 10 °C). As an equation; GDD=(((High+Low)/2)-Baseline) GDDs are typically measured from the winter low.

For example, a day with a high of 23 °C and a low of 12 °C would contribute 7.5 GDDs. Any temperature below the baseline is set to the baseline before calculating the average. For example, a day with a high of 13 °C and a low of 7 °C would still contribute 1.5 GDDs. Likewise, the maximum temperature is usually capped at 30 °C because most plants and insects do not grow any faster above that temperature. However, some warm temperate and tropical plants do have significant requirements for days above 30 °C to mature fruit or seeds.

Plant development

Selected example GDDs (all in °C base 10 °C):

Growing degree days are also used by some farmers to time their use of pest controls so they are applying the treatment at the point that the pest is most vulnerable. For example:
  • Black cutworm larvae have grown large enough to start causing economic damage at 165 GDD
  • Azalea Lace Bug emerges at about 130 GDD
  • Boxwood leaf miner emerges at about 250 GDD
Several beekeepers are now researching the correlation between GDD and the lifecycle of a honeybee colony.

Baselines

10 °C is the most common base for GDD calculations, however, the optimal base is often determined experimentally based on the lifecycle of the plant or insect in question. GDDs may be calculated using either Celsius or Fahrenheit, though they must be converted appropriately; 5 GDDC = 9 GDDF

See also

External links

 


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