By
Charmain Tan Courcelle MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Producers and pesticide applicators trying to find
the safest ways to use pesticides and reduce spray drift may
find the answer blowing in the wind, say scientists involved
in pesticide drift research. "We've
found that downwind distance is by far the most important
variable that affects ground, boom spray drift," said David
Smith, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment
Station agricultural engineer. Smith
led a team that completed a field study in Missouri, and he
cooperated with Illinois researchers to look at the factors
affecting pesticide drift from ground, boom sprayers.
Together these investigations may pave the way for new drift
reduction guidelines. Synthetic
pesticides have been used widely since the mid-1940s to
protect against pest-inflicted crop damage and losses. But
exposure to pesticide residues from off-target spray drift
can lead to significant health and environmental
consequences, as well as cause damage to sensitive plants.
State
and federal agencies regulate the proper use of pesticides
and provide recommendations for spray drift reduction.
Still, efforts by these agencies and scientists at
universities and in industry have not provided all the
answers to drift problems because of the number of variables
affecting spray drift, and the possible interactions between
some of the variables, Smith said. "Researchers,
Extension experts and federal agencies have always told
pesticide applicators, 'here is a list of things that affect
spray drift,' but these variables have never been placed in
priority order," Smith said. "Without information about the
variables that are most significantly related to drift, an
applicator could focus on controlling one or two factors
that have only a small, or no, effect on drift deposits."
To find
out what factors have greatest effect on spray drift, Smith
evaluated how drift deposits were affected by 14 variables
over three years in Missouri and 11 variables over nine
years in Illinois. Some of the variables he examined
included downwind distance, wind speed, air temperature,
spray nozzle height, spray pressure, flow rate, nozzle
orientation angle and droplet discharge speed. "The
results from the two studies complemented each other," Smith
said. "In both studies, we found that for ground, boom spray
drift control, the applicator has to be most concerned about
downwind distance. "The
next most important variable is wind speed, but it is
clearly secondary in importance to downwind distance. Air
temperature also had an effect." Smith's
results are in contrast to a previous theory that held
droplet size to be the most influential variable in drift
from ground, boom sprayers. "The
most interesting thing that we found in these large-scale
field tests is that droplet size doesn't have as significant
an effect on ground, boom drift as previously thought,"
Smith said. One
possible explanation is the time available for the wind to
interact with spray droplets during most ground, boom sprays
is much less than for aerial and orchard applications, which
have been used in the past as models for spray
drift. Smith
said he expects the results from these two studies will
provide better-defined guidance for ground, boom drift
control to producers, applicators and agricultural chemical
companies. "The
variables we found to be closely related to drift deposits,
like downwind distance to a sensitive area or crop, wind
speed and air temperature, can often be managed by making
spray applications near sensitive areas at selected times on
given days," Smith said. Smith
conducted the research with MAFES experimental statistician
Pat Gerard and Loren Bode of the University of Illinois.
Results from this research were published in "Transactions
of the ASAE" (American Society of Agricultural
Engineers). Released:
Aug. 13, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Research helps
farmers limit
boom spray drift
For more information, contact: Dr. David Smith, (662)
325-7351
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:39
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010813.html
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