VPD means vapor pressure difference. The lower the humidity is -at a certain temperature- the more water will be absorbed and transpired thru the stomata. The 70% RH are recommended for plants in the early and mid vegetative state; in bloom 60% are okay and in the 2nd half around 55%. But there is a way to deal with it..
Imagine the following:
When the VPD is too high the plants take up more water and therefor also more nutes; especially calcium. But too much calcium uptake blocks magnesium and within a few days you'll see a magnesium deficit in the upper half of the plants(yellowing between the veins, chlorosis).
it is often confused with bleaching from too much light.
Let's say the VPD is 20% too high you can do two things. The best way is to simply increase the humidity but sometimes it is impossible for some reason(risk for bud rott, hot summer, ..). In this case you can also lower the nutrient strength by 20%. Plants can now use more water but would still uptake the same amount of nutes.
Usually its easier to deal with a high VPD when you use a hydro system. In soil you have less control over the EC unless you use light mix.
I'm using the VPD charts below and use only a dehumidifier in the 2nd half of the flowering stage and only at night.
60% with lights on and <55% at night and it works great.
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