Generations – April 2022

Page 6

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It’s hard to trust spring,

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ave you heard the simplest explanation of an acorn? In a nutshell, it’s an oak tree. All trees will soon be waking from their winter nap. What happens to a tree when beautiful springlike weather spurs sap to start flowing and buds to start swelling, only to be followed by a winterlike cold snap? According to North Dakota State University Extension Forester Joe Zeleznik, “One of the challenges for trees in the northern Great Plains is the extreme variability in our weather. In March 2021, the temperature swings were huge. Daily highs were in the 50s and 60s. Sometimes the nights were below freezing while other nights were relatively warm.” Zeleznik continues, “As an example, on March 19, 2021, in Bowman, N.D., the temperature was 16 degrees at 7 a.m., and it rose to 65 by 4 p.m. Less than 12 hours later, it was below freezing again.” Massive temperature swings are common in February and March. Zeleznik calls it “the midwinter fakeout,” when a warm spell makes it seem like spring has arrived, only to be pulled back into winter soon after.

tected from late winter’s mood swings with a special type of dormancy called endodormancy. These trees are dormant not only BY DON KINZLER because of cold weather, Gardening Columnist but because of an internal plant inhibitor sysAre trees injured by ers, generally do just tem that prevents them dipping in and out of fine. They’re not fooled from growing, even if spring? Zeleznik says by these false signals weather conditions turn it depends. “Our native and they stay dormant.” warm in mid- to late Our native tree spe- winter. trees, such as ash, bur Once a tree enters oak, box elder and oth- cies are specially pro-

Growing Together

Live twigs have a green layer under the outer bark.

if you’re a tree endodormancy in autumn, it won’t grow again until it receives enough cold to overcome this internal security system. Tree species differ in how many days of chilling are required to break this internal dormancy. Our native tree species generally require enough days of chilling to keep them safely dormant past the “mid-

winter fakeout.” Zeleznik notes that sometimes non-native ornamentals are misled and will break dormancy and start growing, which can be their downfall. When temperatures fall back to normal, these trees can’t reharden quickly enough and they get damaged.

TREE: Page 7

DAVID SAMSON / THE FORUM


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