Abstract

BackgroundPesticides play an important role in protecting the food supply and the public’s health from pests and diseases. By their nature, pesticides can be toxic to unintended target organisms. Changing winds contribute to pesticide drift— the off-target movement of pesticides—and can result in occupational and bystander illness.MethodsWe systematically linked historical weather data to documented pesticide drift illnesses. We used Washington State Department of Health data to identify 252 drift events that included 690 confirmed cases of illness from 2000 to 2015. To characterize wind speed and direction at the time of the events, we paired these data with meteorological data from a network of 171 state weather stations. We report descriptive statistics and the spatio-temporal extent of drift events and compare applicator-reported weather conditions to those from nearby meteorological stations.ResultsMost drift events occurred in tree fruit (151/252 = 60%). Ground spraying and aerial applications accounted for 68% and 23% of events, respectively; 69% of confirmed cases were workers, and 31% were bystanders. Confirmed cases were highest in 2014 (129) from 22 events. Complete applicator spray records were available for 57 drift events (23%). Average applicator-reported wind speeds were about 0.9 m •sec− 1 (2 mi •hr− 1) lower than corresponding speeds from the nearest weather station values.ConclusionsDrift events result from a complex array of factors in the agricultural setting. We used known spatio-temporal aspects of drift and historical weather data to characterize these events, but additional research is needed to put our findings into practice. Particularly critical for this analysis is more accurate and complete information about location, time, wind speed, and wind direction. Our findings can be incorporated into new training materials to improve the practice of pesticide application and for better documentation of spray drift events. A precision agriculture approach offers technological solutions that simplify the task of tracking pesticide spraying and weather conditions. Public health investigators will benefit from improved meteorological data and accurate application records. Growers, applicators, and surrounding communities will also benefit from the explanatory and predictive potential of wind ramping studies.

Highlights

  • Pesticides play an important role in protecting the food supply and the public’s health from pests and diseases

  • Drift events result from a complex array of factors in the agricultural setting

  • Our findings can be incorporated into new training materials to improve the practice of pesticide application and for better documentation of spray drift events

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Summary

Introduction

Pesticides play an important role in protecting the food supply and the public’s health from pests and diseases [1, 2] By their nature, pesticides can be toxic to unintended target organisms [3]. Regardless of applicator license status, public entities must keep spray records—for roadside applications, as must anyone making landscape applications to commercial properties, parks, schools, and other public places. As it relates to wind, the state requires an applicator to record direction and estimated velocity of the wind during the time the pesticide was applied, but it does not specify a standardized method for measuring these variables. Common practice described in training is for an applicator to take a measurement with a handheld anemometer on the upwind side of a sprayed area outside the tree canopy

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