{ "culture": "en-US", "name": "pcuacc", "guid": "62BDF709-82C6-4624-9D89-99DE0E72FB9E", "catalogPath": "", "snippet": "Certain biennial plants which have a dormant (i.e. rest) season during winter may require a period of accumulated minimum temperatures below a threshold in order to stimulate growth, develop leaves, flower or set fruit. Deciduous trees, for example, need a certain period of winter chilling for completion of their seasonal dormancy. Insufficient winter chilling may result in delayed foliation, reduced fruit set (including fruits remaining small and being misshapen as they ripen) and reduced fruit quality (including reduced firmness, and/or greener fruit coloration). The required amount of chilling for completion of the rest period varies between species, cultivars and different locations. Many chill accumulation models have been formulated, most of them requiring hourly temperatures to have either been observed or estimated. The Linsley-Noakes PCU model was used to produce maps of chill units in this Atlas. The techniques by which PCUs were computed and then mapped are described in the shaded sections which follow. Derivation of hourly values of temperature for the determination of PCUs hourly values of temperature were determined from the 50 year time series of daily maximum and minimum temperatures generated at each of the 429 700 raster points covering South Africa, using the techniques described by Schulze and Maharaj (2004). For each daytime and night-time cycle the sine-log equations derived by Linsley-Noakes et al. (1995) were employed. In these equations the estimation of hourly temperatures is based on the observation that the daytime solar cycle follows a sine curve from sunrise to sunset, whereas night-time cooling may be described by a logarithmic equation.", "description": "", "summary": "Certain biennial plants which have a dormant (i.e. rest) season during winter may require a period of accumulated minimum temperatures below a threshold in order to stimulate growth, develop leaves, flower or set fruit. Deciduous trees, for example, need a certain period of winter chilling for completion of their seasonal dormancy. Insufficient winter chilling may result in delayed foliation, reduced fruit set (including fruits remaining small and being misshapen as they ripen) and reduced fruit quality (including reduced firmness, and/or greener fruit coloration). The required amount of chilling for completion of the rest period varies between species, cultivars and different locations. Many chill accumulation models have been formulated, most of them requiring hourly temperatures to have either been observed or estimated. The Linsley-Noakes PCU model was used to produce maps of chill units in this Atlas. The techniques by which PCUs were computed and then mapped are described in the shaded sections which follow. Derivation of hourly values of temperature for the determination of PCUs hourly values of temperature were determined from the 50 year time series of daily maximum and minimum temperatures generated at each of the 429 700 raster points covering South Africa, using the techniques described by Schulze and Maharaj (2004). For each daytime and night-time cycle the sine-log equations derived by Linsley-Noakes et al. (1995) were employed. In these equations the estimation of hourly temperatures is based on the observation that the daytime solar cycle follows a sine curve from sunrise to sunset, whereas night-time cooling may be described by a logarithmic equation.", "title": "Map", "tags": [ "positive chill units |", "biennial plants", "winter chilling", "fruit quality |", "PCU", "chill accumulation", "weather and climate" ], "type": "Map Service", "typeKeywords": [ "Data", "Service", "Map Service", "ArcGIS Server" ], "thumbnail": "thumbnail/thumbnail.png", "url": "", "extent": [ [ 16, -34 ], [ 32, -22 ] ], "minScale": 0, "maxScale": 1, "spatialReference": "WGS_1984_World_Mercator", "accessInformation": "", "licenseInfo": "" }