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Pesticide Drift Management

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Presentation on theme: "Pesticide Drift Management"— Presentation transcript:

1 Pesticide Drift Management
Curtis Rainbolt, Les Baucum, and Ron Rice

2 Pesticide Drift Management Topics For Discussion
Definition Types of drift Factors affecting drift Management

3 What is Pesticide Drift?
Drift- movement of spray particles beyond the designated target Two types: physical drift vapor drift

4 Drift (continued) All movement to off label crops is illegal
Chemical drift is an unavoidable part of pesticide application Managing spray drift is the responsibility of the applicator

5 Spray drift is undesirable!
Inefficient use of equipment and time Under-application/ineffective control Crop damage and litigation concerns Unintentional contamination Air/water pollution Environmental and human health/safety

6 Physical Drift Movement of pesticide away from target during application Influenced by: Droplet size Boom height Weather

7 Physical Drift Weather
Wind speed/direction * most important Soil moisture Temperature Humidity Inversions

8 Drift Potential May be High at Low Wind Speeds
Because: Light winds (0-3 mph) tend to be unpredictable and variable in direction Calm and low wind conditions may indicate presence of a temperature inversion Drift potential is lowest at wind speeds between 3 and 10 mph (gentle but steady breeze) blowing in a safe direction When winds are light and variable it usually means that the direction they are blowing is unpredictable. This is a disaster waiting to happen in most application scenarios. As an applicator you would rather have a wind blowing strong enough to have a set direction. Then you can make better judgments regarding a particular application in reference to downwind sensitive areas. Such as not spraying, leaving a buffer and coming back when wind changes direction, etc.

9 Physical Drift Droplet Size
Measured in microns micron range 200 micron average Smaller drops increase drift potential (< 100)

10 Fall Rate of Various Size Droplets

11 Relationship of Particle Size to Drift
Based upon 10’ fall in 3 MPH winds

12 Physical Drift Ideal Spray Boom Height
Spacing Easy and inexpensive Wide-angle nozzles can be placed lower to the target, but also produce smaller droplets.

13 Physical Drift Other Factors to Consider
Nozzle selection Spray pressure Spray volume

14 Turbulence-Chamber and Air-Assist Nozzles
Allow air into a mixing chamber creating a vacuum that mixes the air and spray solution Forms large bubbles that do not drift as far Turbo TeeJet Greenleaf, TurboDrop

15 Influence of Spray Pressure on Droplet Size Flat Fan Nozzle - 0.6 GPM

16 Pesticide Drift Management Drift Control Agents
“thickeners” increase droplet size of pesticide/water mixes

17 Vapor Drift The volatilization or evaporation of a pesticide from the soil or crop surface that occurs after application Vapor drift is influenced by: * vapor pressure/volatility * temperature * wind speed

18 Vapor drift can occur even days after the application
Wind Drift Vapor Non-Target Sensitive Crop

19 Six Ways to Reduce Drift
Check the wind speed and direction Read the pesticide label Use nozzles that produce large droplets Lower your application pressures Lower your boom height Be aware of your surroundings

20 References used in the development of this slide set include :
Strategies for reducing herbicide drift, Iowa State University, Brent Pringnitz, Kansas State University's Application Technology Project website Pesticide Drift Management, University of Georgia, Eric Prostko Herbicide Spray Drift, North Dakota State University, Reducing Spray Drift. Ohio State Univ. Extension Bulletin 816, H. Erdal Ozkan. Herbicide Application Management. Sandoz Crop Protection, 1993.


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