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Cross-ventilation question for Avics
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<blockquote data-quote="Whitelightning777" data-source="post: 140008" data-attributes="member: 26980"><p>The humidity in those places is high at ground level but not so much as you get higher up.</p><p></p><p>Humid air is much denser then less humid air.</p><p></p><p>The problem with the avic caresheets is that they integrated humidity as recorded at ground level because most scientists won't climb a one hundred foot tall tree just to take readings.</p><p></p><p>There are a wide variety of snakes in said trees and some of them are venomous, not to mention monkeys and other critters that might resent a newcomer.</p><p></p><p>Anyone who has parasailed or even climbed a mountain or a tree will have noticed how humidity drops dramatically.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Whitelightning777, post: 140008, member: 26980"] The humidity in those places is high at ground level but not so much as you get higher up. Humid air is much denser then less humid air. The problem with the avic caresheets is that they integrated humidity as recorded at ground level because most scientists won't climb a one hundred foot tall tree just to take readings. There are a wide variety of snakes in said trees and some of them are venomous, not to mention monkeys and other critters that might resent a newcomer. Anyone who has parasailed or even climbed a mountain or a tree will have noticed how humidity drops dramatically. [/QUOTE]
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