The tropics have been
historically defined as lying between the
Tropic of Cancer and
Tropic of Capricorn, at latitudes north and south, respectively. According to the American Meteorological Society, the poleward fringe of the subtropics is at latitudes approximately
35° north and
south, respectively. Several methods have been used to define the subtropical climate depending on the climate system used. The most well known is the
Trewartha climate classification, which defines a subtropical region as one that has at least eight months with a mean temperature greater than and at least one month with a mean temperature under . German climatologists Carl Troll and Karlheinz Paffen defined
warm temperate zones as plain and hilly lands having an average temperature of the coldest month between and in the
Northern Hemisphere and between and in the
Southern Hemisphere, excluding
oceanic and
continental climates. According to the Troll-Paffen climate classification, there generally exists one large subtropical zone named the warm-temperate subtropical zone, which is subdivided into seven smaller areas. According to the E. Neef climate classification, the subtropical zone is divided into two parts:
rainy winters of the west sides and
eastern subtropical climate. According to the Wilhelm Lauer & Peter Frankenberg climate classification, the subtropical zone is divided into three parts:
high-continental,
continental, and
maritime. According to the Siegmund/Frankenberg climate classification, subtropical is one of six climate zones in the world.
Leslie Holdridge defined the subtropical climates as having a mean annual
biotemperature between the frost line or critical temperature line, 16 °C to 18 °C (depending on locations in the world), and 24 °C. The frost line separates the warm temperate region from the subtropical region. It represents the dividing line between two major physiological groups of evolved plants. Most of the plants are sensitive to low temperatures on the warmer side of the line. They can be killed back by frosts as they have not evolved to withstand periods of cold. On the colder temperate side of the line, the total flora is adapted to survive periods of variable lengths of low temperatures, whether as seeds in the case of the annuals or as perennial plants that can withstand the cold. The 16 °C–18 °C segment is often "simplified" as 17 °C \bigl(2^{(\log_{2}12\ +\ 0.5)}\ ^\circ\! \mathrm{C} \approx16.97\ ^\circ\! \mathrm{C}\bigr). The Holdridge subtropical climates straddle more or less the warmest subtropical climates and the less warm tropical climates as defined by the Köppen-Geiger or Trewartha climate classifications. However,
Wladimir Köppen has distinguished the hot or subtropical and tropical (semi-)arid climates (
BWh or
BSh) having an average annual temperature greater than or equal to from the cold or temperate (semi-)arid climates (
BWk or
BSk) whose annual temperature average is lower. This definition, though restricted to dry regions, is almost similar to Holdridge's. == Rainfall ==