Spray Deposition on Weeds (Palmer Amaranth and Morningglory) from a Remotely Piloted Aerial Application System and Backpack Sprayer Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • This study was designed to determine whether a remotely piloted aerial application system (RPAAS) could be used in lieu of a backpack sprayer for post-emergence herbicide application. Consequent to this objective, a spray mixture of tap water and fluorescent dye was applied on Palmer amaranth and ivyleaf morningglory using an RPAAS at 18.7 and 37.4 Lha1 and a CO2-pressurized backpack sprayer at a 140 Lha1 spray application rate. Spray efficiency (the proportion of applied spray collected on an artificial sampler) for the RPAAS treatments was comparable to that for the backpack sprayer. Fluorescent spray droplet density was significantly higher on the adaxial surface for the backpack sprayer treatment than that for the RPAAS platforms. The percent of spray droplets on the abaxial surface for the RPAAS aircraft at 37.4 Lha1 was 4-fold greater than that for the backpack sprayer at 140 Lha1. The increased spray deposition on the abaxial leaf surfaces was likely caused by rotor downwash and wind turbulence generated by the RPAAS which caused leaf fluttering. This improved spray deposition may help increase the efficacy of contact herbicides. Test results indicated that RPAASs may be used for herbicide application in lieu of conventional backpack sprayers.

published proceedings

  • DRONES

altmetric score

  • 4.55

author list (cited authors)

  • Martin, D., Singh, V., Latheef, M. A., & Bagavathiannan, M.

citation count

  • 4

complete list of authors

  • Martin, Daniel||Singh, Vijay||Latheef, Mohamed A||Bagavathiannan, Muthukumar

publication date

  • September 2020

publisher

published in