This study was designed to determine the extent to which changes in the evaporative power of the environment (E(max)) affect sweating an evaporative rates. Six male subjects undertook four 60-min bouts of cycle ergometer exercise at 56% maximal O2 uptake (VO2max). E(max) was varied by differences in ambient temperature and airflow; two exercise bouts took place at 24-degrees-C and two at 35-degrees-C, with air velocity at <0.2 and 3.0 m/s in both. Total sweat production was estimated from body weight loss, whereas whole body evaporative rate was measured continuously from a Potter beam balance. Body core temperature was measured continuously from a thermocouple in the esophagus (T(es)), with mean skin temperature (T(sk)BAR) computed each minute from thermocouples at eight sites. Total body sweat loss was significantly greater (P < 0.05) in the 0.2- than in the 3.0-m/s condition at both 24 and 35-degrees-C. T(sk)BAR was higher (P < 0.05) in the still-air conditions at both temperatures, but final T(es) was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in still air only in the 35-degrees-C environment. Thus the reduced E(max) in still air caused a greater heat storage, thereby stimulating a greater total sweat loss. However, in part because of reduced skin wettedness, the slope of the sweat rate-to-T(es) relation at 35-degrees-C in the 3.0-m/s condition was 118% that at 0.2 m/s (P < 0.005). Heart rate at 60 min was significantly higher (P < 0.05) only in the still-air condition at 35-degrees-C (155 vs. 137 beats/min), when convection and radiation heat exchange were negligible and E(max) became insufficient to prevent an increased rate of heat storage and continuous heart rate drift. Neither occurred in the still-air condition at 24-degrees-C because of the combination of a large convection plus radiation heat loss and the intrinsic airflow-induced increase in E(max) produced by leg movement during cycling.