humidity

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

david miller

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Dec 27, 2009
Messages
123
Reaction score
4
Location
fl
this answered a ? i was going to ask about the humidity that's surround the outside of a leaf.and if the air is already saturated can the tree still cool itself with the evaporation that happens during transporation maybe some find this interesting Heat Stroke in Trees
 
Kinda hard to follow the charts. The bars and relative humidity part. So what it is saying, you can have 100% and tree can still loose more than it can get, if it is above 95, did I get that right?

JPS?
 
This all depend on the ground and root system of the trees (example Florida) 100 to 110 f. are average temperature in summer in south Fla)
At 3fts deep is is the average water level so they don't suffer from sun stroke, they have plenty water, so he all depend on the location of the tree and what kind of tree it is.

Hope this help , the chart does not consider the location of the trees, wich is very important to consider.
 
i dont think if the air is a 100% saturated. that mean no more moisture can be absored at 99% that 100 time less than inside the tree so it can. we sweat to cool ourself if the air that surround our body becomes saturated we dont get the cooling effect until that air is move away by airflow I.E wind same with trees
 

Latest posts

Back
Top