Method
Chill Units
The Daily Positive Chill Unit (or PCU), also known as the Modified Utah Chill Unit model or the Infruitec model, was used to produce maps of mean seasonal or monthly chill units. The optimum temperature range for chilling accumulation is between 7.2 and 9.1°C, with temperatures >15°C negating chilling. In contrast to the Utah model, the PCU model assumes that high temperatures can only negate the chilling received on the day of occurrence and do not affect the chill units accumulated previously.
The techniques by which PCUs were computed from hourly temperature values are outlined in detail in Schulze (2011). From the hourly PCU calculations, daily PCUs were accumulated, from which monthly and seasonal totals of PCUs could be computed for the period April to August.
The modelling for the intermediate future (2050s) was conducted using five different CMIP3 GCMs (Schulze, 2011).
In addition, the month in which a certain level of chilling has accumulated was computed and mapped for the historical climate and the intermediate future. The levels were set at 250 (low), 500 (medium) and 700 (high) PCUs.
Maps
Map Information
The maps present total monthly chill units across South Africa from April to August, for the historical and the intermediate future periods.
Historically, chill unit accumulation begins slowly in April, but the rate increases rapidly in May and June, reaching a peak in July, and thereafter (August) decreasing. Areas receiving the highest chill units include the mountains of the south-western and southern interior, the mountains and high-lying parts of the Eastern Cape and the Drakensberg foothills. Significant chilling is also experienced on the central plateau, the Highveld and the eastern Escarpment.
The projections into the intermediate future indicate a later start to significant chilling, with reductions in chill units in all the months and a contraction of the areas receiving high levels of chilling.
- Chill Units (April) - South Africa
- Chill Units (May) - South Africa
- Chill Units (Jun) - South Africa
- Chill Units (Jul) - South Africa
- Chill Units (Aug) - South Africa