Title: Pesticide Drift Management
1Pesticide Drift Management
- Curtis Rainbolt, Les Baucum, and Ron Rice
2Pesticide Drift ManagementTopics For Discussion
- Definition
- Types of drift
- Factors affecting drift
- Management
3What is Pesticide Drift?
- Drift- movement of spray particles beyond the
designated target - Two types
- physical drift
- vapor drift
4Drift (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
5Spray 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
6Physical Drift
- Movement of pesticide away from target during
application - Influenced by
- Droplet size
- Boom height
- Weather
7Physical DriftWeather
- Wind speed/direction
- most important
- Soil moisture
- Temperature
- Humidity
- Inversions
8Drift 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
9Physical DriftDroplet Size
- Measured in microns
- 20-370 micron range
- 200 micron average
- Smaller drops increase drift potential (lt 100)
10Fall Rate of Various Size Droplets
11Relationship of Particle Size to Drift
Based upon 10 fall in 3 MPH winds
12Physical DriftIdeal Spray Boom Height
Spacing
- Wide-angle nozzles can be placed lower to the
target, but also produce smaller droplets.
13Physical DriftOther Factors to Consider
- Nozzle selection
- Spray pressure
- Spray volume
14Turbulence-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
15Influence of Spray Pressure on Droplet SizeFlat
Fan Nozzle - 0.6 GPM
16Pesticide Drift ManagementDrift Control Agents
- thickeners
- increase droplet size of pesticide/water mixes
17Vapor 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
18Vapor drift can occur even days after the
application
Wind
Drift
Vapor
Non-Target Sensitive Crop
19Six 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
20References used in the development of this slide
set include
- Strategies for reducing herbicide drift, Iowa
State University, Brent Pringnitz,
http//www.weeds.iastate.edu/mgmt/qtr99-1/nozzles.
htm - Kansas State University's Application Technology
Project website http//www.bae.ksu.edu/rewolf/ - Pesticide Drift Management, University of
Georgia, Eric Prostko http//www.cropsoil.uga.edu/
weedsci/slides/drift/ - Herbicide Spray Drift, North Dakota State
University, http//www.ext.nodak.edu/extpubs/plant
sci/weeds/a657w.htm - Reducing Spray Drift. Ohio State Univ. Extension
Bulletin 816, H. Erdal Ozkan. - Herbicide Application Management. Sandoz Crop
Protection, 1993.