Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 01 Mar 2006

Effect of Application Variables on Spray Deposition, Coverage, and Ground Losses in Nursery Tree Applications

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Page Range: 45 – 52
DOI: 10.24266/0738-2898-24.1.45
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Abstract

An experimental cross-flow (CF) fan sprayer and a conventional, axial-fan (AF), orchard sprayer were used to treat multiple rows consisting of four year old, multi-stem, red maple trees, Acer rubrum L. and Turkish filbert trees, Corylus colurna L. The effects of sprayer type, fan orientation, application volume, and ground speed on canopy and ground spray deposits and canopy spray coverage across multiple target rows were evaluated. Variations in deposits and coverage across the canopies were generally smaller for the CF sprayer than the AF sprayer. The AF sprayer produced the highest overall deposits in the first row nearest the sprayer. Reducing fan speed kept more material in the tree row adjacent to the sprayer while decreasing spray volume did not affect the spray deposits in that row. Tower sprayer fan orientation did not affect canopy deposits but could be used to minimize spray drift. These results indicate that the most uniform spray distribution in a tree canopy is obtained by treating the canopy from each side. These findings also suggest growers should experiment with different spray volume and speed settings that can provide efficacious applications more efficiently.

Copyright: Copyright, All Rights Reserved 2005

Contributor Notes

Funded in part by a grant from The Horticultural Research Institute, 1000 Vermont Ave., N.W. Suite 300, Washington, DC 20005. Test site and plants were donated by Robert Lyons and Sunleaf Nursery, Madison, OH. Product and company names are necessary to report factually on available data; however, the USDA neither guarantees nor warrants the standard of the product, and the use of the name by the USDA implies no approval of the product to the exclusion of others that may be suitable also. The authors thank Bob Lyons and the staff at Sunleaf Nursery in Madison, Ohio for providing plants and a test site; Betsy Anderson, Ozlem Bostan, and Leona Horst for technical assistance.

2Agricultural Engineer, USDA-ARS ATRU, Wooster, OH 44691. To whom all correspondence should be addressed. <derksen.2@osu.edu>.

3Research Leader-Plant Pathologist, USDA-ARS ATRU.

4Agricultural Engineer (retired), USDA-ARS ATRU.

5Senior Research Scientist, USDA-ARS ATRU.

6Ohio State University Extension, Horticultural Agent, Lake County, OH.

Received: 04 Apr 2005
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