What RH targets should cannabis operators use at each growth stage?
Relative humidity targets in cannabis cultivation are not fixed numbers — they shift with growth stage because the plant's moisture requirements and contamination vulnerability change substantially from propagation through harvest.
During propagation and early vegetative growth, clones and seedlings benefit from higher humidity (70–80% RH) because their undeveloped root systems cannot replace moisture lost to transpiration, and the goal is to minimize leaf-level vapor pressure deficit to keep the plant from wilting while roots establish. This window is relatively low-risk for mold because plant tissue density is low and airflow easily reaches all surfaces.
As vegetative growth progresses, the target drops to 55–70% RH. Plants are building mass, root zones are established, and the primary risk transitions from plant stress to the early-stage pathogens that can establish on roots and stem bases — Pythium, Fusarium, and Rhizoctonia — which all benefit from high ambient moisture.
Flower is where humidity management becomes critical. Early and mid-flower targets are 40–50% RH. Late flower — the last two to three weeks before harvest — should be 35–45% RH. Dense inflorescences trap moisture internally, and the combination of internal moisture retention with any ambient RH above 50% creates the microclimate conditions Botrytis cinerea and powdery mildew require. Harvest timing should include a further RH reduction in the days before harvest to reduce surface moisture on flowers entering the drying environment.
These targets represent room-ambient readings. The actual management standard is tighter: the canopy microclimate should stay within 5–8% of ambient. Achieving that requires airflow management, not just dehumidification.
Why is the canopy microclimate different from the room sensor reading?
HVAC sensors sample air at a point — typically mounted on walls or in return air paths — that does not represent conditions inside a dense canopy. The discrepancy is not a sensor malfunction; it is a physics problem. Dense plant material transpires continuously, releasing moisture into the immediate air around it. That moisture-laden air is partially trapped by the canopy itself, particularly in the interior of dense inflorescences and in the mid-canopy zones where airflow is lowest.
In a flowering room running 50% ambient RH, the interior of a dense bud cluster can be running 58–62% RH. That 8–12% gap is the difference between a clean harvest and a Botrytis outbreak. The microclimate is invisible to the wall sensor.
The factors that widen the gap between ambient and canopy microclimate include:
- Canopy density. Higher plant density and more plant mass per square foot creates more transpiration and more obstruction to airflow moving through the canopy.
- Leaf-to-air exchange at mid-canopy. Upper canopy receives direct airflow from overhead circulation. Mid-canopy and interior bud zones often receive substantially less.
- Defoliation practices. Insufficient defoliation during flowering leaves more leaf area trapping moisture inside the canopy, raising the internal humidity.
- Fan placement and coverage. Oscillating fans placed at canopy height dramatically reduce the gap between ambient and microclimate. Fans positioned above the canopy and blowing across the top do not.
- Lights-off transitions. When lights go off, canopy temperature drops, vapor pressure deficit shifts, and relative humidity rises. The microclimate effect intensifies during this transition because the ambient sensor catches up faster than the canopy interior does.
Understanding and managing the microclimate gap is the difference between running a humidity program and actually controlling humidity at the contamination-relevant level.
What are the most common humidity failure points in indoor cannabis operations?
Humidity failure in a well-designed facility rarely happens because the HVAC system lacks capacity. It happens because the capacity doesn't reach the places where it matters.
Dehumidifier sizing and placement. Many facilities install dehumidifiers sized for the room volume but not for the moisture load of a dense canopy at late flower. Plants produce substantially more transpiration per square foot in late flower than in veg. A system sized for a vegetative load will run continuously and still fall short in a dense flowering room at peak biomass.
Dead zones in the room. HVAC systems distribute air unevenly. Corner dead zones, low-circulation areas, and spaces around HVAC equipment are consistently the first places mold establishes. A single uncirculated corner with 5–10% higher humidity than the room average is a reliable outbreak point.
Lights-off humidity spikes. Virtually every indoor facility experiences a relative humidity rise when lights cycle off. Canopy temperature drops, transpiration continues briefly at the higher rate, and ambient humidity rises before the dehumidification system compensates. This nightly spike, if it consistently pushes canopy microclimate above 60% RH, is sufficient to drive Botrytis establishment over a multi-week flowering cycle.
CO₂ enrichment and sealed room management. Sealed rooms running CO₂ enrichment require the HVAC system to manage humidity with no outside air exchange. This is a manageable configuration, but it requires more dehumidification capacity than a room with passive outside air exchange, and the failure mode when dehumidification falls short is faster and more severe.
Late-cycle defoliation gaps. Operators who reduce defoliation in late flower to preserve terpene development or final bud mass often close the canopy in the last two weeks when contamination risk is highest. This is a tradeoff that demands compensating humidity management, not a default practice.
How does humidity control intersect with contamination prevention specifically?
Humidity is not one contamination risk among many — it is the environmental condition that determines whether latent contamination pressure becomes an active contamination event. Botrytis cinerea, powdery mildew, Aspergillus species, and Cladosporium are all present at some level in most cannabis facilities. What separates facilities that harvest clean from those that fail TYM testing is whether the environmental conditions allowed those organisms to establish, grow, and sporulate.
Botrytis requires relative humidity above 70% and temperatures between 60–75°F to initiate and sustain infection. A room running 50% RH with strong canopy airflow may carry Botrytis conidia at detectable levels without those conidia ever finding the conditions to germinate. The same room running 65% ambient — with canopy microclimate above 70% — will give those conidia exactly what they need.
Powdery mildew operates somewhat differently: it can germinate at lower relative humidity than Botrytis (as low as 50% ambient), but it requires free water on leaf surfaces for rapid spread, which high humidity provides. Aspergillus species are opportunistic and can establish across a wide humidity range, but elevated humidity accelerates colonization and mycotoxin production on damaged or senescing tissue.
The practical implication is that humidity management is the rate-limiting environmental variable for contamination. Getting dehumidification right — sized correctly, distributed correctly, reaching the canopy microclimate — reduces the number of contamination events that occur regardless of what organisms are present. Surface sanitation and treatment programs address what's already in the facility; humidity management determines whether those organisms get the conditions to act.