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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Chocrates to c/askscience
 

I have a pothos that lives in half gallon jar of water.
It used to live outside on my patio that got morning and early afternoon sun in Central Texas where the temperatures were getting in the 90's, the dew point was in the 70's and the humidity usually is 40 - 60% typically, though weather underground tells me it was closer to 90 - 100%.

My jar of water would last for weeks before it noticeably evaporated and had to be filled.

Anecdotally the plant lived in doors in the jar with much less direct sunlight and a near constant temperature of 70 degrees from the AC and I never had to fill it up.

Flash forward to now, I am in South East Louisiana, my jar of plants is inside in a windowsill that gets morning sun. My AC is bad so it gets up to about 84 in here.

I am noticing that the water is receding quite rapidly, it is noticeable within a few days and at least once a week I need to get water in there to cover the top roots again.

The humidity down here is much higher so I am curious, why would it be evaporating so much faster down here where it is much more humid presumably? Any ideas?

Edit: I should probably add it is growing algae now too and that was never a "problem" before.

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[–] Candelestine 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Problem with this one is there are a lot of factors involved. Not just evaporation rate, but also the rate at which your plant is consuming water.

Higher temp and additional sunlight should lead to a faster metabolism, which would make the plant consume water faster. Hell, there could be houseflies taking sips for all we know, do houseflies drink water? I'm not an entomologist.

Regarding the algae, back in Tx any algae "seeds" died long before they got to you. Not the case anymore.

[–] Chocrates 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

That makes sense. I also have fertilized it more and it is growing fast so I bet that has a lot to do with it!

What do you mean by the algae "seeds"? They are in the air everywhere but my plant soup wasn't hospitable enough for them to grow?

[–] Candelestine 1 points 2 years ago

No, they likely died from having to fly through harsh texan air from wherever the nearest algae plant is. Algae is a plant like any other, just itty bitty. It has to come from somewhere.