In one day, a full grown redwood tree expels more than 2 tons of water through its leaves.
Redwoods Release 2+ Tons of Water Daily Through Leaves
Standing beneath a coast redwood on a foggy morning, you might notice water dripping from the branches above. But that's not just condensed fog—it's part of an enormous hydraulic feat happening inside the world's tallest trees.
A mature redwood can transpire up to 500 gallons of water per day through its needles, which equals roughly 2 tons. To put that in perspective, that's enough water to fill about seven bathtubs daily, all pulled up from roots that might reach 300 feet below the crown.
The Redwood Water Highway
How does water defy gravity to climb the equivalent of a 30-story building? The answer lies in a process called transpiration—essentially, evaporation from leaf surfaces that creates suction strong enough to pull water upward through the tree's vascular system.
As water molecules evaporate from tiny pores in the needles, they create negative pressure that tugs the entire water column upward, molecule by molecule. It's like drinking through the world's longest straw, except the "straw" is made of xylem tissue and can reach heights of over 350 feet.
Fog: The Secret Ingredient
Here's where it gets really interesting: redwoods don't just take water from the soil. Research shows they get up to 40% of their water from fog that condenses directly on their needles. The trees actually strip moisture from the air, both absorbing it through their foliage and dripping it to the ground for their roots.
This creates a self-sustaining microclimate. The more water redwoods transpire, the more humidity they add to the air. That humidity becomes fog, which the trees then harvest. They're essentially creating their own weather system.
Living Rain Machines
The water that redwoods release doesn't just vanish. That daily 500-gallon output becomes:
- Humidity that keeps the forest cool and moist
- Fog formation that other plants depend on
- Stream flow when condensed fog drips from branches
- A climate buffer against droughts and heat waves
Scientists call this "fog drip," and in redwood forests, it can add the equivalent of 10-15 inches of rainfall per year to the ecosystem. The trees are literally making it rain beneath their canopy.
Next time you're in a redwood forest, remember: you're standing in a massive water recycling facility, where ancient trees are moving tons of water from earth to sky and back again, every single day, just by doing what they've done for millions of years.