I'm constantly "super busy", but I can still find time for this. ^^ Nevertheless, thank you for your courtesy. I originally assumed you were talking about a bearded dragon tank, not a whole bearded dragon hall. As for the first scenario, I rather tend to use mobile infrared thermometers for my various tanks. But what do I know - I don't keep bearded dragons; just Inland taipans. ^^Okay, sorry, super busy right now. So, just a quick explanation: when you deal with big halls you can't just generate one suiting climate for the whole hall. That would cause too many problems with the visitors and is an energetic nightmare. Therefore you work with gradients of abiotic parameters. Most important is temperature. You basically want to create a horizontal and a vertical temperature gradient within the animals comfort range. Through that the animal can choose where to be. That's why I plan with three thermometers. One in the hottest spot on the ground, one on the coldest spot on the ground, one in the air in the maximum height that the animal uses.
Watering plants in buildings like that is a science in itself. The substrate that the plants need is often very sandy, which means that it doesn't hold water. So you either need to let lots of water flow through the soil (natural condition) or you need another method to make the water stay around the roots for longer periods of time.
Option number 1 ist a huge issue for many animals from Arid climates. While they can often deal with extreme temperatures, the constant moisture will cause fungi and pneumonia. Especially in reptiles.
As previously mentioned by others, there already exist several working arid plant greenhouses, some even with live animals (including reptiles). So that "science" is doable, depending on the species in question and the technology involved.
For the record: why not assume the next time that you are not the only geek here; that would save your more precious time to be "super busy" and come across as less condescending.
See you at #weltdergifte
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