Soybean plants were grown from seeds (in soil culture or hydroponically) and exposed for 38 days to similar humidity conditions in greenhouse during the day and ''dry'' (50-65%) of ''wet'' (95%) relative humidity (RH) regimes during the night. Growth (shoot fresh/dry weight, pod number, and their fresh/dry weight) was significantly favored by the dry RH regime. N-2-fixation capacity (nodule number and dry weight, nitrogen concentration, and total nitrogen amount per plant, and nitrogenase activity) were significantly enhanced by the dry RH regime. An opposite growth/N-2 fixation response was apparent under the wet RH regime. The dark transpiration rate was negatively correlated with the RH, being closely correlated to growth/N-2 fixation parameters (R-2 ranged between 0.64 and 0.80). Similar patterns of growth/N-2 fixation responses to the RH environment in the dark as related to the water dynamics should be emphasized.