Advertisement

GARDENER:Summer heat is perfect for tropical plants to thrive

THE COASTAL

August 18, 2007|By RON VANDERHOFF

The long, hot days of summer are taking their toll. Many of the plants that were so glorious just a couple of months ago are now stressed in the heat of August. Roses have only an occasional short-lived flower. Lavenders are stringy. Groundcovers are parched. Gardens and gardeners both are strained at this time of year.

But one group of plants is thriving: tropicals.

The hotter the better for plants originating in the hot, steamy jungles of Africa, South America or Asia.

These plants, from the world's equatorial regions, evolved in a climate of high day and night temperatures, humidity and moisture.

While unhappy during the cool half of Orange County's year, they thrive during our warm summer. Unlike most of the plants in your garden, now is the time for tropical plants.

Advertisement

Common examples of tropical plants in our coastal gardens are plumeria, elephant ear, canna, banana, ginger, staghorn fern, bromeliad, anthurium, scheflera, philodendron, mandevillea, most palms and jasmine.

Many other plants you may not suspect as tropical are bougainvillea, asparagus fern, avocado, impatiens and begonia, even Bermuda and St. Augustine grass.

Surprisingly, nighttime temperatures may play the most significant role in the fast summer growth routine of most tropical plants.

During our warm, balmy nights of July, August and September, our tropical plants are growing nearly nonstop — even in the middle of the night.

Plant cells divide and leaves expand around the clock as tropical plants store the afternoon's solar energy, fuel for their busy photosynthetic factories.

In simplistic terms, plants are either tropical or temperate. Tropical plants populate the regions of the world near the equator.

In tropical regions there is little seasonality. Winter temperatures aren't much different than summer temperatures. In contrast, temperate plants occupy areas farther from the equator and closer to the poles.

These plants are accustomed to a cool season and a warm season, to varying degrees, mostly depending upon their latitude.

Understanding the differences between tropical and temperate plants is often seen as a milestone in a gardener's education.

Daily Pilot Articles
|
|
|