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Tarantula Forum Topics
General Tarantula Discussion
Pink Toed Tarantula Habitat Suggestions and Feeding Help?
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<blockquote data-quote="Nada" data-source="post: 17511" data-attributes="member: 361"><p>Humidity is relative. If you live in Florida, you probably don't need additional humidity, that said many avics are humidity dependant.</p><p>Spraying however does not achieve humidity. Humidity is achieved by have a closed top, proper side ventilation and a water bowl over-flowed weekly.</p><p>@[USER=786]Neekl816[/USER] The care sheets you posted are very general. 75-85 % is a pretty big range and in my opinion Largely inaccurate. Very few species need humidity as high as 80%,Common Pink Toes (A.Avic) Thrive at 60% . Kurt is technically wrong when he says that they don't need humidity, but he is accurate in saying proper humidity can be maintained with a water bowl. Spraying doesn't create humidity, it creates wet.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nada, post: 17511, member: 361"] Humidity is relative. If you live in Florida, you probably don't need additional humidity, that said many avics are humidity dependant. Spraying however does not achieve humidity. Humidity is achieved by have a closed top, proper side ventilation and a water bowl over-flowed weekly. @[USER=786]Neekl816[/USER] The care sheets you posted are very general. 75-85 % is a pretty big range and in my opinion Largely inaccurate. Very few species need humidity as high as 80%,Common Pink Toes (A.Avic) Thrive at 60% . Kurt is technically wrong when he says that they don't need humidity, but he is accurate in saying proper humidity can be maintained with a water bowl. Spraying doesn't create humidity, it creates wet. [/QUOTE]
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Forums
Tarantula Forum Topics
General Tarantula Discussion
Pink Toed Tarantula Habitat Suggestions and Feeding Help?
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