When it comes to plants in bedrooms it’s just important to think about CO2.
A lot of plants emit CO2 at night when there’s no light. If you are sleeping in a room with closed windows that can be problematic.
Sansevieria is a plant that doesn’t release CO2 at night but absorbs it. It’s also okay with getting water once per month.
Do you have any cites for the idea that having a few plants in a normal sized bedroom is problematic? That seems really implausible, especially since bedrooms aren’t air tight, and the CO2 presumably diffuses throughout the entire house. I’m not talking about sleeping in a rainforest here, just having a few plants.
Also, a lot of people sleep with another person in the room, do plants really emit more CO2 over the course of a night, than another person would?
When it comes to plants in bedrooms it’s just important to think about CO2. A lot of plants emit CO2 at night when there’s no light. If you are sleeping in a room with closed windows that can be problematic.
Sansevieria is a plant that doesn’t release CO2 at night but absorbs it. It’s also okay with getting water once per month.
Do you have any cites for the idea that having a few plants in a normal sized bedroom is problematic? That seems really implausible, especially since bedrooms aren’t air tight, and the CO2 presumably diffuses throughout the entire house. I’m not talking about sleeping in a rainforest here, just having a few plants.
Also, a lot of people sleep with another person in the room, do plants really emit more CO2 over the course of a night, than another person would?
Downvoted for being about as plausible as fan death http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_death