Wind Tunnel Studies on Spray Deposition on Leaves of Tree Species Used for Windbreaks and Exposure of Honey Bees
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Date
2003
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Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Abstract
A wind tunnel study was conducted to determine pesticide deposition on commonly used windbreak tree species used as spray drift barriers and associated exposure of honey bees. Although it has been known that windbreaks are effective in reducing chemical drift from agricultural applications, there is still an enormous information and data gap on details of the dependence of the mechanism on the biological materials of the barriers and on standardization of relevant assessment methods. Beneficial arthropods like honey bees are adversely affected by airborne drift of pesticides. A study was initiated by first establishing a wind tunnel to create a controlled environment for capture efficiency work. Suitable spray parameters were determined after a preliminary study to construct and develop a wind tunnel protocol. A tracer dye solution was sprayed onto the windbreak samples and honey bees located in the wind tunnel at various simulated wind speeds. Analysis of data from this work has shown that needle-like foliage of windbreak trees captures two to four times more spray than broad-leaves. In addition, it was determined that, at lower wind speeds, flying bees tend to capture slightly more spray than bees at rest. (C) 2003 Society of Chemical Industry.
Description
Keywords
Spray Drift, Deposition, Buffer Zones, Windbreaks, Tree Species, Honey Bees, Wind Tunnel, Pesticides
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
WoS Q
Q1
Scopus Q
Q1
Source
Volume
59
Issue
3
Start Page
358
End Page
364