MYTH: The Greenhouse Effect is responsible for faster growth and better health.
FACT: The Greenhouse Effect is over-rated.
Although there is some truth to the belief that the Greenhouse Effect is responsible for the trees' accelerated growth,
research shows that more of the accelerated growth is due to the lack of wind and the effects of phototropism. As wind speed
increases above seven mph, the tree's defense mechanism begins to shut down photosynthesis to prevent the tree from drying
out. Without photosynthesis, the tree stops growing.
Some manufacturers attempt to close off their protectors and shelters in order to create a "mini-greenhouse"
micro-climate. This "closed system" approach seldom achieves the intended result and could actually be fatal to
the tree. These manufacturers tout the benefits of this "closed system" at the same time they warn growers to lift the
shelters when the weather is unseasonably warm. That's because the so-called greenhouse prevents the dissipation of heat
and moisture. However, raising the shelter can create a "chimney effect" that can cause the leaves to become dessicated.
A certain amount of heat and moisture is good but too much of a good thing is a bad thing.
For photosynthesis to take place at a healthy rate, leaves must absorb huge amounts of carbon dioxide from the air. Restricting
air flow into the protector reduces inflow of carbon dioxide, and that's simply not good for the trees.
Closed system shelters slow dormancy in the fall and accelerates emergence from dormancy in the spring. While
other trees around them are keeping pace with the change in temperature, trees inside closed system shelters are not.
In the fall, the problem occurs when the temperature drops below 28 degrees Fahrenheit and remains there for several
hours. By then the trees not "protected" by these shelters have usually gone dormant and are therefore not adversely
affected by the drop in temperature. Not so for the trees inside closed system shelters. They freeze and often die. For that
reason closed system shelters must be lifted each fall, even though that's difficult because the shelters may
be stuck in the ground.
Then, after these trees have gone dormant, their shelters must be lowered to the ground to provide protection from winter
weather. The procedure must be repeated again in the spring; otherwise, the trees in closed system shelters will emerge from
dormancy too soon.
If that's not enough hassle, during the summer, when temperatures soar into the 90s for days on end, the trees will bake
and sometimes die, if the shelters aren't lifted.
OVERCOMING THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT
Venting or opening the shelter/protector is the only way to use the good the Greenhouse Effect does and avoid the bad.
Both Tree Pro tree protectors and Miracle Tube tree shelters are available with holes drilled in their sidewalls. Tree Pros
can also be easily opened up to allow for even greater air circulation.