Farms.com Home   News

Temperature Inversions and Pesticide Application

By Laura Edwards

Pesticide application season is in full swing. Breezy and windy conditions are always a challenge for pesticide applicators in South Dakota, however, temperature inversions are just as important of a challenge. Inversions can trap droplets and volatile pesticides, which can then move horizontally off target. Sometimes this pesticide drift can occur 12 or more hours after application, for example when a strong overnight inversion sets in.

Temperature inversions are simply defined by warmer air over cooler air. The difference in the temperature between higher and lower heights determine how strong an inversion is. For pesticide application, spraying during an inversion is at best to be avoided, and at worst illegal on some labels.

With the help of weather data from the Mesonet at SD State (mesonet.sdstate.edu), it is possible to look at how often inversions occur and at what times of day. The graph below shows data for eastern South Dakota for the months of May, June and July in 2016.

The number of days of each month are on the vertical (y-axis), and the hour of the day, from midnight to midnight, are on the horizontal (x-axis). The gray shaded areas are nighttime hours, from sunset to sunrise. The yellow shaded areas are the first hour after sunrise, and the last hour of the day before sunset.

There are two key messages:

  • Nighttime inversions are very common during these three months in eastern South Dakota. At any particular time at night, there is a 70 to 80 percent chance of having an inversion.
  • Inversions are just as frequent in the first and last hour of the day as they are in the overnight hours. They generally build during the last one to two hours of the day before sunset, and dissipate one to two hours after sunrise.

As a result, our advice is to be particularly cautious when applying pesticides from one hour before sunset until one hour after sunrise. We also suggest utilizing the Mesonet Spray Tool to help determine real-time conditions in the field.
 

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Adapting to ESA: Mitigation Overview

Video: Adapting to ESA: Mitigation Overview


CropLife America’s “Adapting to ESA” instructional video series is designed to provide clear, field-ready guidance that supports responsible pesticide use while protecting endangered species and their habitats. This is part 1 of the four-part series moderated by Dr. Stanley Culpepper, a leading weed science specialist with the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension.

Part 2: Bulletins Live! Two
Part 3: Spray Drift
Part 4: Runoff

The video series is part of a new set of educational tools released by CropLife America (CLA), in partnership with the Agricultural Retailers Association (ARA) and the Council of Producers and Distributors of Agrotechnology (CPDA), to help farmers, agricultural retailers, and pesticide applicators better understand the Endangered Species Act (ESA).