| Literature DB >> 25674478 |
Tara M Strand1, Carol A Rolando1, Brian Richardson1, Stefan Gous1, Martin Kf Bader1, Don Hammond2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pest eradication strategies that use pesticides require application methods that have the lowest environmental and human health impact while maintaining the highest probability of success. This is highly important when eradication takes place in sensitive areas, such as urban or riparian zones. A new aerial application method, the spot-gun, was developed to provide good pesticide coverage on host species while minimising off-target exposure. This type of targeted aerial approach is useful in areas where conventional broadcast aerial spraying was historically used but was not ideal due to the quantity of pesticide hitting non-host species and going off-target. An even distribution of the active component is essential for eradication.Entities:
Keywords: Aerial application; Deposition; Efficacy; Eradication; Spot-spray
Year: 2014 PMID: 25674478 PMCID: PMC4320204 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-3-750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Description of conventional broadcast aerial application set up on a Bell JetRanger helicopter with nominal droplet size and the nozzle type, number and configuration used to achieve the droplet size range, and the resulting application rates
| Standard application parameter | Parameter value |
|---|---|
| Nominal droplet size (μm VMDa) | 255 |
| Nozzle Typeb | TeeJet 8005 (flat fan) |
| Number of nozzles | 31 |
| Configuration of nozzles on boomc | 10, 11, 10 |
| Flow rate per nozzle (ℓ/min) | 2 |
| Pressure (bar) | 2.5 |
| Flow rate (ℓ/min) | 62 |
| Application rate (ℓ/ha) | 200 |
aVMD is volume mean diameter.
bAll nozzles were manufactured by Spray Systems Co, Wheaton IL, USA.
cleft, centre, and right; Nozzles spaced together without blanks at centre of aircraft.
Results from a cumulative link mixed model testing the effect of the conventional broadcast and spot-gun applications deposition of dye on the adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces
| Parameter |
|
| Z |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | 4.79 | 1.31 | 3.65 | <0.001*** |
| Random effect | Variance (%) | |||
| Tree | <0.1 | |||
| Vertical crown region | 48.36 | |||
| Horizontal crown region | 51.63 | |||
| Adaxial/abaxial surface | <0.1 | |||
Signif. codes: 0 ‘***’0.001 ‘**’0.01 ‘*’0.05.
Variance components derived from the cumulative link mixed model are also shown.
Figure 1Cumulative frequency curves of deposition found on the adaxial (upper) leaf surfaces for the conventional broadcast (panels A and C) and spot-gun (panels B and D) treatments. If the cumulative frequency curves are similar in magnitude and shape then the distribution of dye was similar.
Figure 2Cumulative frequency curves of deposition found on the abaxial (lower) leaf surfaces for the conventional broadcast (panels A and C) and spot-gun (panels B and D) treatments. If the cumulative frequency curves are similar in magnitude and shape then the distribution of dye was similar.
Figure 3Box plots of the deposited dye, visually assessed into 10% bins, found on upper (adaxial) and lower (abaxial) leaf surfaces demonstrate that the spot-gun application (top) provided similar coverage on both leaf surfaces whereas the broadcast application (bottom) did not. Each treatment had different application rates, therefore a one-to-one comparison across treatments cannot be made. The line in the centre of the boxes shows the median value, while the first and third quartiles are the bottom and top boundaries of the box. The whiskers extend to the minimum and maximum values. The data were bound by the upper limit of the 91-100% bin and the lower limit of the 1-10% bin.
Figure 4Example of the ‘smear’ deposit produced by the spot-gun application (top) and, for comparison, the ovoid deposit produced by the standard broadcast method (bottom). Both leaves were placed in the 90%-100% coverage bin.