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Published byIrma Parks Modified over 8 years ago
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Sprayer prescriptions for protectant sprays on spring canopies Robyn Gaskin, Dave Manktelow, Bill May, Kevin Steele & Rebecca van Leeuwen
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- 3 trials; Atom 2000 Turbo sprayer on post-harvest AUTUMN canopies - Trial 1: WSPs, 6 sprayer setups (AI-FF, AI-HC, ATR-HC, Article 58) - Trial 2: WSPs, 9 sprayer setups (ATR-HC, Article 58… & AI-FF) - Trial 3: measured deposits, 6 sprayer setups (ATR-HC, Article 58)
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Atom Sprayer, front entry fan, 3.8 m rows Coverage potential as good as it gets?
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Water sensitive paper (WSP) setups; in-canopy and plume height Upper & lower surfaces WSPs Pinned “in canopy” on top & bottom surfaces of leaves - upper, mid, lower canopy X row centre, leader zones WSPs mounted on poles at 1m intervals, 1-5 m high in leader zone
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Hayward, post-harvest light autumn canopy, late May
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ATR (fine HC) nozzles 400 L/ha, 100 ml adj/100L 6 km/h I= <10%, R= <10% Article 58 (HC) nozzles 1000 L/ha, 40 ml adj/100L 6 km/h I= 10%, R = 60% Article 58 (HC) nozzles 1000 L/ha, water 6 km/h Inadequate= <10%, Runoff= 30%
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Water sensitive paper assessments WSPs do not show spray coverage on surfaces ! Each droplet contains the same volume WSP Hayward Leaf top surface No adjuvant Du-Wett 50 ml/100 L Du-Wett 100 ml/100 L 2 3 4 mm 2 1 719 22650 mm 2
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WSP comparisons Dilute spray e.g 800 L/ha, no adjuvant 2x concentrate spray e.g. 400 L/ha + 400 ml adjuvant Run-off Excellent Inadequate?? Each droplet contains 2x more chemical! and will spread 10x more on leaf surface
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ml adjuvant/100 litres Spread area (mm 2 ) Performance of wetters & spreaders used in CPP: spreading on a difficult-to-wet leaf
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STUDY 3: deposits (Hayward) Tmt # NozzlesSpray volu me Air outputTravel speed (L/ha)(m 3 /h)(km/h) 1*Article 581000moderate6.0 2ATR600moderate6.0 3ATR400moderate6.0 4ATR400low6.0 5*ATR400high6.0 6ATR400high7.5 * Single leaf side deposits also measured 2 nozzle types, 3 spray volumes, 3 fan speeds, 2 travel speeds, All tmts contained Du-Wett at 400 ml/ha (40-100 ml/100L)
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All tmts contained Du-Wett adjuvant: 400 ml/ha b a Mean deposits on foliage a b b b CONTROL
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All tmts contained Du-Wett adjuvant: 400 ml/ha abc a Mean deposits on foliage in upper/lower canopy zones ab bc c c d f d ef de CONTROL
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All tmts contained Du-Wett adjuvant: 400 ml/ha b a Mean deposits on foliage in centre row and leader zones a bbcd b cd d bc cd bcd cd CONTROL
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All tmts contained Du-Wett adjuvant: 400 ml/ha Mean deposits on foliage in all canopy zones CONTROL * * * * sig. diff. to control * * *
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All tmts contained Du-Wett adjuvant: 400 ml/ha c Mean deposits on single leaves a c CONTROL = 40 ml/100 L DW b #5 = 100 ml/100 L DW
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All tmts contained Du-Wett adjuvant: 400 ml/ha Mean deposits on single leaves: top surfaces only CONTROL = 40 ml/100 L DW #5 = 100 ml/100 L DW
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All tmts contained Du-Wett adjuvant: 400 ml/ha Mean deposits on single leaves: bottom surfaces only CONTROL = 40 ml/100 L DW #5 = 100 ml/100 L DW a b bc bcd cd d
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Surface tension (mN/m) Surface age (msec) water Du-Wett, 50 Actiwett, 60 Omniwett, 50 Nu-film 17, 60 ml/100 L Latron B, 60 Surface tension decay over time: adjuvants used in CPP
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Surface tension (mN/m) Surface age (msec) water Du-Wett, 50 Actiwett, 60 Omniwett, 50 Nu-film 17, 60 ml/100 L Latron B, 60 Surface tension decay over time of adjuvant solutions used in CPP Du-Wett, 100
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Effect of plant surface wettability & droplet surface tension on the adhesion of 500 μm droplets 77% 5% 47%
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Video of a spray droplet impacting a bean leafbean (fluorescent dye under UV light) = Cu spray (no adj) on upper surface of a kiwifruit leaf (CA of both leaves = 68°)
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Video of a spray droplet impacting Chenopodium albumalbum = Cu spray (no adj) on lower surface of a kiwifruit leaf (CA of both leaves = 130°)
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Video of a spray droplet containing super-spreader adjuvant impacting Chenopodium albumalbum = Cu spray + Du-Wett on lower surface of a kiwifruit leaf (CA of both leaves = 130°)
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Wetting of hairy surfaces (Hort 16A fruitlet) Water sprayed to runoff (+Brilliant Blue dye) Du-Wett Spray 0.1% (+BB dye)
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Recommendations for protectant sprays on spring canopies Spray run-off volumes in early spring canopies are 800-1000 L/ha; around bloom no more than 1500 L/ha 2x concentrate sprays are recommended for protective chemicals; 400-500 L/ha early on, no more than 750 L/ha late spring Sprayer calibration is essential! Adjuvant: Du-Wett at 400 ml/ha to ensure coverage of leaf surfaces Dilute; use recommended chemical rate/ha + 400 ml/ha DW (e.g. 40-50 ml/100 L adjuvant) 2x concentrate: use recommended chemical rate/ha in half the dilute spray volume + 400 ml/ha DW (e.g. 80-100 ml/100 L adjuvant) Use low volume sprays only if concentrated and with Du-Wett
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permit concentrate spray applications, saving time and $$ improve adhesion of large spray droplets & on hard-to-wet surfaces ensure complete & even coverage of foliage with protectants in low- volume sprays reduce drying time, reduce phyto, improve efficacy used in fully dilute sprays only at very low concentrations will cause loss of sprays to run-off with excessive spray volumes, dew (rain?) potential to increase crop damage at high use rates and/or high water rates (penetration) Horticultural SUPER-SPREADER adjuvants…
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