Pesticide drift has been a concern since the introduction of pesticides. Historical incidences with off-target movement of 2,4-D and dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) have increased our understanding of pesticide fate in the atmosphere following aerial application. More recent incidences with dicamba have brought to light gaps in our current understanding of aerial pesticide movement following ground application. In this paper, we review the current understanding of inversions and other weather and environmental factors that contribute to secondary pesticide movement and raise questions that need to be addressed. Factors that influence volatility and terminology associated with the atmosphere, such as cool air drainage, temperature inversions, and radiation cooling will be discussed. We also present literature that highlights the need to consider the role(s) of wind in secondary drift in addition to the role in physical drift. With increased awareness of pesticide movement and more herbicide-resistant traits available than ever before, it has become even more essential that we understand secondary movement of pesticides, recognize our gaps in understanding, and advance from what is currently unknown.
Nomenclature: dicamba; 2, 4-D; dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane
Introduction
Pesticide movement from intended targets onto unintended targets has been a concern as long as pesticides have been applied. The first report recognizing pesticides as air pollutants occurred in 1946 (Daines 1952). In 1953, authors of a Stanford Law Review article summarized the conflict of pesticide drift well: “Science has created weapons which are of inestimable value to many farmers, but which threaten the economic existence of others.” (Stanford Law Review 1953).
Commercial introduction of crops with dicamba-resistant traits and subsequent off-target movement of dicamba herbicide is the most recent example of large-scale pesticide movement. However, pesticides moving off target in large quantities is not a novel concern, and additional examples, including those outlined below, have advanced our understanding and guided research on aerial pesticide movement.
Introduction of 2,4-D and Crop Dusting
The U.S. agriculture industry rapidly adopted the practice of applying pesticides via crop dusting in the early 1950s. Commercial introduction of 2,4-D; the return of newly unemployed, World War II-trained military pilots; and a surplus of military planes provided the opportunities for this expansion (Stanford Law Review 1953). It was common for crop dusters to apply pesticides in the early morning or after sundown to avoid physical drift associated with higher midday wind speeds (Stanford Law Review 1953). This practice likely resulted in pesticides being applied during inversion-like conditions. The increase in crop dusting applications resulted in an increase in legal pesticide drift cases, and in 1952–1953, nine crop dusting cases reached the appellate court (Akesson and Yates 1964; Stanford Law Review 1953).
The Grape-Growing Region of the Yakima Valley
Large-scale off-target movement of 2,4-D continued to be a problem into the next decades. The wheat and grape-growing regions of Yakima Valley in Washington state occur in close proximity, and by the 1960s, herbicide damage in the grape-growing region, resulting from applications of 2,4-D to wheat, was severe and widespread. Air sampling research conducted in the Yakima Valley region in the early 1970s indicated that 2,4-D had traveled approximately 16 km from wheat fields to vineyards and in sufficient quantities to injure grapes (Reisenger and Robinson 1976). It was during these observations that the term “air mass” damage was derived (Robinson and Fox 1978). “Air mass” damage referred to large areas where consistent herbicide injury symptoms appeared on the sensitive crop without a definable gradient and was speculated to be the result of a large, contaminated cloud passing through the area (Robinson and Fox 1978). The state began banning highly volatile 2,4-D formulations and enforcing cutoff dates in specific counties in the early 1970s (Reisenger and Robinson 1976; Robinson and Fox 1978).
Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane in the Atmosphere
Off-target movement of the highly persistent insecticide organochlorine dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) resulted in several research studies conducted in the 1980s. Results from air sampling research conducted aboard ships in the Arabian Sea, Indian Ocean, and north Atlantic Ocean indicated that DDT was 25 to 40 times more highly concentrated over waters in proximity to regions where the chemical was still used compared with areas where the chemical had been banned (Bidleman and Leonard 1982). Findings from Bidleman and Leonard's study combined with other research reviewed by Pimentel and Levitan (1986) led to the conclusion that atmospheric pesticide levels are a function of the location where application occurred, wind direction at application, subsequent movement of air masses containing pesticides, and atmospheric transport time.
Postemergence Dicamba Applications to Soybean and Cotton
The most recent off-target dicamba injury observations (Bish et al. 2019b; Bradley 2017a, 2017b; Steckel 2017) were unique in that applications could only be made by via ground sprayers. However, reported damage was still extensive (Figure 1) (Bish et al. 2019b; Bradley 2017b; Steckel 2017). In 2017, off-target movement of dicamba resulted in 2,708 dicamba-related injury investigations by state departments of agriculture (Figure 1; Oseland et al. 2020). During this same year, state extension weed scientists estimated that approximately 1.5 million ha of soybean were reported to be injured by dicamba in the United States (Bradley 2017b). Additional reports of injury to sensitive, nontarget vegetation were extensively documented throughout 2018, 2019, and 2020, especially in areas where adoption of soybean and cotton crops with the dicamba-resistant trait was highest (Bradley 2018; Hager 2019; Hartzler 2020a; Hartzler 2020b; Johnson and Ikley 2018; Steckel 2018, 2019; Zimmer et al. 2019; Zimmer and Johnson 2020). In a recent survey of state departments of agriculture posted on the Association of American Pesticide Control Officials (AAPCO) website, 151 dicamba-related cases were reported in Illinois, 116 in Minnesota, 102 in Missouri, 73 in Indiana, and 63 in Nebraska (AAPCO 2020). At least two surveys, including the AAPCO survey, noted that underreporting of dicamba injury to state departments of agriculture is common (AAPCO 2020; Bradley 2019). Based on these numbers and observations, it seems that the extent of off-target movement of dicamba that has occurred during this time period is more substantial than any chemical movement previously experienced in U.S. agricultural history.
Once off-target movement of dicamba began to appear in areas where adoption of crops with the dicamba-resistance traits was higher (i.e., southeastern Missouri, northeastern Arkansas, and western Tennessee), one observation that became immediately apparent was the extent of injury that occurred across entire fields of dicamba-sensitive soybean (Bradley 2017a; Hager 2017; Loux and Johnson 2017; Steckel 2017). Extension weed scientists and others who became involved in visiting these injured fields commonly reported a phenomenon in which essentially no discernable differences in the severity of the dicamba injury could be observed across entire fields of dicamba-sensitive soybean, regardless of the size of the injured field or proximity to the source of the suspected off-target movement. This phenomenon came to be known as the “landscape-level effect” and can likely be attributed to a combination of factors including 1) the extreme sensitivity of non-dicamba–resistant soybean to even the most minute quantities of dicamba (Hartzler 2020b; Solomon and Bradley 2014); 2) innate sensitivity of many other broadleaf species to dicamba (summarized in Table 1); and 3) the tendency of ground-based applications of dicamba to move into and within the atmosphere through factors that influence secondary movement.
Primary and Secondary Pesticide Movement
Pesticide drift is commonly described as either primary or secondary movement. Primary movement occurs when pesticides move off target at the time of application (Carlsen et al. 2006; Jones et al. 2019). The terms primary movement, primary drift, spray drift, and direct drift are often used interchangeably (Carlsen et al. 2006). This drift is the result of an active ingredient of a pesticide being transported away from the intended area after coming through the application spray nozzle, due to air flow at the time of application (Combellack 1982). Primary drift is not affected by the formulation of a pesticide's active ingredient (Bird et al. 1996; Carlsen et al. 2006). Many factors that result in primary movement are largely within an applicator's control (Bish and Bradley 2017; Vangessel and Johnson 2005). The scope of this review does not include analysis of these factors, which include nozzle type, droplet size, adjuvants, boom height, and sprayer speed.
Secondary movement occurs after herbicide application (Jones et al. 2019; Mueller 2015). Variables that affect secondary movement are much more difficult to control than those associated with primary movement and can be more difficult to characterize. Vapor drift is one form of secondary movement and is the result of chemicals volatilizing into the atmosphere. Wind erosion is another form and occurs when the pesticide is deposited on the intended surface but is moved back into the atmosphere with the soil particulate to which it is bound (Clay et al. 2001). Application method, size and chemical makeup of soil particulate, and herbicide dissipation rates affect secondary movement by wind erosion. In a comparison of residual herbicides incorporated into the soil and herbicides applied on undisturbed soils, the amount of herbicide collected on wind-erodible soil sediments was approximately 8% and 65%, respectively (Clay et al. 2001). Additionally, pesticides applied during stable atmospheric conditions can remain in the atmosphere and be readily available for secondary movement (Bish et al. 2019a). Although these conditions might seem like the perfect time to spray to minimize physical drift, they can result in high levels of off-target pesticide movement (Bird et al. 1996).
This review covers our current understanding of how pesticides move into or remain in the atmosphere and become available for secondary movement. Much of the review will encompass research specific to dicamba and 2,4-D. The extreme sensitivity of nonresistant plants, distinct injury symptoms, and historical volatility issues associated with these chemicals have resulted in a vast array of studies published in the literature. However, most of the factors discussed in this review will apply to pesticide movement in general.
Factors That Promote Volatility
Volatility allows chemicals to return to the atmosphere and become available for off-target transport. Synthetic auxin herbicides such as 2,4-D and dicamba are prone to volatility due to their chemical properties. A study conducted in Canada in the late 1970s suggested that vapor drift was the major contributor to off-target 2,4-D movement with an estimated 35% of high-volatile 2,4-D formulations volatilizing off of Canadian prairie soils (Maybank et al. 1978). Later in the 1970s, Behrens and Lueschen (1979) found that dicamba applied to corn could volatilize in sufficient quantities to injure soybean for up to 3 d following application and cause symptoms to sensitive soybean plants 60 m from the treated area. They also found that of four formulations tested, the acid form of dicamba was most susceptible to volatilize in laboratory settings, and that dicamba volatilized more readily from soybean and corn leaf surfaces than from soil (Behrens and Lueschen 1979).
The vapor pressure of synthetic auxin herbicides is in general higher relative to many other common herbicides, and subtle increases in air temperature can result in more rapid transition of molecules from liquid to vapor (Spencer and Cliath 1983). New 2,4-D and dicamba formulations have since been developed to reduce volatility in large part by reducing the vapor pressure of the chemical. Two of the most recently developed formulations of dicamba salts, the diglycolamine salt of dicamba combined with an acetic acid:acetate pH modifier (DGA-VG) and the N,N-bis-(3aminopropyl)methylamine salt of dicamba (BAPMA), have much lower vapor pressures than dicamba acid (Hartzler 2017; Hemminghaus et al. 2017; MacInnes 2017; Werle et al. 2018). However, both formulations were detected for 72 h after application in air sampling studies conducted 20 cm above the soybean canopy indicating that detectable amounts of these new formulations were volatilizing over time (Bish et al. 2019a). Using bioassay plants, Jones et al (2018) showed that injury associated with secondary movement, indicative of volatility of BAPMA and DGA-VG applications, could be observed at 108 m and 180 m from the sites of application, respectively (Jones et al. 2018). These results provide more research support to field observations that lower-volatile dicamba formulations can volatilize in meaningful quantities.
Research on the most recent formulation of 2,4-D known as 2,4-D choline, the choline being a quaternary ammonium salt, has shown reduced volatility when tested in Georgia using cotton as bioassay plants (Sosnoskie et al. 2015). Potted cotton plants were placed outside of treated plots approximately 1 h after applications with three formulations of 2,4-D and removed at either 24 h or 48 h following application. Injury from the 2,4-D choline application was not detected further than 1.5 m from the site of application. Older formulations of 2,4-D ester and 2,4-D amine moved 48 m and 3 m from the treated sites, respectively (Sosnoskie et al. 2015). It is important to note that a complete understanding of 2,4-D choline volatility and secondary movement may not occur until 2,4-D resistant cotton and soybean are grown on a larger scale for concurrent years.
Additional factors that can influence volatility include a plant's ability to absorb the chemical, pH of the environment, and air temperature. The rate of chemical uptake affects how long the pesticide is available on the surface for volatilization. Uptake is influenced by epicuticle thickness of the leaf on which the droplet lands (Baker and Hunt 1981) and relative humidity at the surface of the leaf, which influences stomatal conductance (Pallas 1960). Legleiter et al. (2018) found that following applications of 2,4-D plus glyphosate with various nozzles and over four weed species, 2,4-D levels on the leaf surfaces were 4% to 16.6% of the initial levels at 24 h after application. Studies in the early 1970s showed that 40% of radiolabeled dicamba applied to wheat or Tartary buckwheat leaves remained on the leaves after 24 h (Chang and Vanden Born 1971). In 1993, research showed that surface residues of 2,4-D and dicamba on wheat plants was greatly reduced 24 h after application (Cessna 1993). We have preliminary data indicating that DGA-VG can be detected on soybean leaf surfaces 48 h after an application; however, we are unaware of any peer-reviewed literature on the half-lives of new dicamba formulations on leaf surfaces.
Dicamba is most likely to convert to the highly volatile dicamba acid as pH lowers to near 5 (Abraham 2018). Sources that can influence dicamba pH include spray tank solution pH and soil pH (Mueller and Steckel 2019a; Oseland et al. 2020). Other sources such as pH of morning dew on leaf surfaces are also likely. Mueller and Steckel found that adding glyphosate to the DGA-VG or BAPMA formulations of dicamba decreased spray tank formulation to a pH of near or below 5.0 depending on the carrier volume and starting pH of the water source (Mueller and Steckel 2019a). They went on to show that addition of glyphosate to DGA-VG increased the amount of dicamba detected compared with dicamba alone (Mueller and Steckel 2019b). Those findings were similar to ours, in which addition of glyphosate to a dicamba spray solution increased the amount of dicamba detected in the air from 4.45 ng m-3 to 8.45 ng m-3 (Bish et al. 2019a). More recently, we found that soil pH can affect the likelihood of dicamba volatilization (Oseland et al. 2020). In a series of binary logistic regression models developed to identify weather and environmental factors that improve the likelihood of dicamba applications remaining on target, we found that as soil pH increased, the likelihood of a successful application increased. Model results were validated with field studies, which showed that dicamba applied to soils when the pH was <6.8 was more likely to volatilize and move onto sensitive bioassay plants (Oseland et al. 2020). The significance of the pH of the soil surface, which is often more acidic than the entire layer of topsoil, has likely been underestimated in its role in dicamba movement, especially when early POST applications are made to vegetative soybean that have not yet canopied and a significant portion of the soil surface is exposed.
Mueller and Steckel (2019b) used humidomes to study the effects of temperature on volatility of the DGA-VG and DGA formulations. As temperature increased from 20 C to >30 C dicamba concentrations in the air following applications of either formulation also increased. When applications were made at air temperatures <20 C, differences in dicamba concentrations were not observed. We (Oseland et al. 2020) also found a relationship between minimum daily air temperature and the likelihood of a successful dicamba application. The lower the air temperature, the more likely the application was successful.
Table 1.
Select literature on sensitivity of species to dicamba and/or 2,4-D arranged by year published from oldest to newest.
Although temperature is an essential component for volatilization of pesticides, other transport mechanisms must be responsible for movement of those pesticides once they are in the air. Statistics for our regression model with air temperature improved when maximum wind speed was included as a variable (Oseland et al. 2020). Additionally, a recent study by Soltani et al. (2020) showed that high temperature alone was insufficient to explain differences observed in secondary drift following dicamba DGA-VG applications made in Arkansas, Indiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Ontario, and Wisconsin.
Volatility is one mechanism that allows pesticides to move in the air. Regardless of the cause, once pesticides move into the air, they are available for transport. The following sections highlight the role of the atmosphere in transporting chemicals that have moved into the air, whether through volatility or applications made during stable conditions.
The Role of the Atmosphere in Pesticide Movement
Boundary Layer
The atmosphere has many layers, and as Fritz et al. (2008) pointed out, this is “the most uncontrollable factor requiring the applicator to make adjustments in real time”. It is an important factor in distribution and deposition of pesticides (Majewski and Capel 1995). Within the atmosphere, the boundary layer is an essential component of primary and secondary pesticide transport given that pesticides are applied in this layer, and that volatilized, eroded, or suspended particles will first enter this layer (Majewski and Capel 1996). The boundary layer is within the troposphere, which is the lowest region of the atmosphere. Boundary layer depth fluctuates throughout the day and is defined as the portion of atmosphere that is directly influenced by the earth's surface (Hu 2015). Surface boundary layer depth is critical for vertical dispersion of airborne pesticides (Thistle 2004). A deeper boundary layer provides a greater opportunity for dispersion and dilution of pesticide droplets (Hu 2015). In the daytime and over land, the boundary layer can reach several kilometers above the earth's surface (Wyngaard 1990), whereas the same layer may reach only tens of meters above the earth's surface during evenings (Smith and Hunt 1978). Changes in depth of the boundary layer are largely impacted by radiative heating and the resulting turbulence or wind.
Radiative Heating and Cooling
Radiative heating and cooling are effects of solar radiation, and radiation cooling is associated with formation of temperature inversions and stable air masses. During daytime hours, radiative heating occurs as the sun emits energy that contacts the earth's surface and is either absorbed into the soil or reflected. Reflected energy heats the air nearest the surface. The warmed air becomes less dense and rises. Simultaneously, cooler air sinks to the earth's surface, is warmed, and begins rising. A convection cycle forms. Radiative heating is associated with the production of winds due to the warm and cool air masses mixing. This wind results in an increased depth of the surface boundary layer, which allows more efficient dispersion and dilution of pesticide droplets. Thus, radiative heating and the generated wind create amenable conditions for pesticide applications (if air temperatures and wind speeds do not exceed maximum label limits).
Radiation cooling occurs near sunset as the earth no longer emits energy and the air near the surface remains cool and dense and does not rise. A lack of mixing between warm and cool air results in a lack of thermal turbulence or vertical wind, which in turn results in a shallower surface boundary layer, which can impede pesticide droplet dispersion and dilution (Hu 2015). This process begins rapidly on clear evenings (Bish et al. 2019b). Radiation cooling can be impeded or inhibited on cloudy evenings, because clouds absorb radiation emitted from the surface and reflect it back to the surface, preventing heat waves from escaping into higher levels of the atmosphere (Thistle 2004). Radiation cooling typically results in nocturnal inversions and little to no wind on at least half of evenings during the growing season months (Hosler 1961; Bish et al. 2019b).
Wind: Turbulent Mixing Versus Horizontal Transport
We tend to group all categories of wind and causal mechanisms together and make generalized statements about monitoring wind speeds at the time of application. This allows for an easily conveyable message to applicators, who typically understand the risks of physical drift (Bish and Bradley 2017). Wind is clearly important in primary movement of pesticides; however, wind also plays a role in dispersing pesticide droplets in the atmosphere. A lack of wind can allow pesticides to remain in the air and move into atmospheric layers that are conducive for transport of the droplets (Thistle 2004; Fritz 2006). A series of publications from California in the 1960s and 1970s showed that aerially applied pesticides moved farther off target and in larger quantities when applications were made when winds were light to nonexistent compared to movement due to physical drift (Yates et al. 1966, 1967, 1976; Bird et al. 1996). Following introduction of the dicamba-resistant crop traits, dicamba injury claims were highest in regions with high concentrations of chemicals per area and geographies with lower wind speeds during the growing season (Bish et al. 2019a). These data provide support for the necessity of wind in reducing secondary movement.
Wind is the product of thermal or mechanical turbulence. Thermal turbulence occurs on most days as a result of radiative heating and effective vertical mixing of warm and cool air masses. Mechanical turbulence is caused by air and ground friction from irregular terrain and/or obstacles such as trees, buildings, terraces, etc. (Monteith and Unsworth 2013).
Increased thermal turbulence during the midday extends the depth of the surface boundary layer, increasing the likelihood of pesticide droplets to be diluted and dispersed. A 4-yr study conducted in the midwestern United States in the 1960s revealed drastic differences in wind mixing depths between midday and overnight conditions. Mixing depth typically ranged from 1,600 to 1,900 m above ground level (AGL) during afternoon hours of the growing season and typically shrunk to 300 to 500 m AGL during early morning (Holzworth 1967).
In the regression models we developed to identify predictors of successful dicamba applications, the best fit model (concordance = 0.7; P = 0.03) included air temperature on the day of application and maximum wind speed on the day of application and the day following application (Oseland et al. 2020). The likelihood that dicamba remained on the intended target increased with lower air temperatures and higher wind speeds (measured at 3.05 m) on the day of application. We concluded that the higher wind speeds resulted in conditions that were favorable for dispersion and dilution of droplets or fines suspended in the air at time of application. In the same study, lower wind speeds on the day following application resulted in increased likelihood that dicamba would remain on target. We speculated that increases in wind or turbulence on the day following application, which increased the likelihood of off-target observations, would result in the degradation of stable air masses or inverted conditions, and consequently allow any pesticide droplets trapped in stable air to move toward the surface and onto unintended plants (Oseland et al. 2020).
Stable Atmosphere
Applications erroneously made into stable air masses typically occur when applicators are working to avoid windy conditions, as in the crop dusting examples mentioned from the 1950s (Bish and Bradley 2017; Stanford Law Review 1953). However, previously described mechanisms such as volatility and wind erosion can also move pesticides into stable air after pesticide application (Pionke and Chesters 1973).
We recently found a relationship between atmospheric stability and the amount of dicamba in the air for the first 8 h after application (Bish et al. 2019a). We found that as air became more stable, the average amount of dicamba detected in the air increased. Air temperature (AT) was monitored at 305 cm and 46 cm AGL. The larger the temperature difference (ΔT) of AT at 305 cm minus the AT at 46 cm (AT 305 – AT 46), the more stable the air. Regression models indicated that for each 1 degree increase in ΔT, detectable dicamba in the air increased by 1.67 ng m-3 over the first 8 h after the application. This is similar to findings reported by Miller et al. (2000) in which higher concentrations of malathion were collected in more stable compared to unstable conditions.
Topography, ground cover, wind, and nearby bodies of water can all affect the stability of the air. In the studies on 2,4-D movement in the Yakima Valley, “high concentration days” were associated with stable conditions that resulted from the formation of a leeside trough, increased cloud cover, and lack of radiative turbulence. High concentration was defined as 2,4-D levels in the air being detected at ≥1 µg m-3 on a given day (Reisner and Robinson 1976).
Two more common conditions associated with the formation of a stable atmosphere and subsequent off-target pesticide movement are temperature inversions and cool air drainage.
Temperature Inversions
The temperature profile on a typical day has the warmest air temperature nearest the earth and cooler temperatures farther from the surface. This temperature profile is due to radiative heating, and typically creates an unstable atmospheric condition due to the generated wind, which can make it conducive for pesticide applications. Inversions occur when this temperature profile shifts so that cooler air temperatures are nearest the earth's surface. Dense, cooler air remains near the earth's surface, so there is no mixing of air masses and little to no vertical winds, and the result is a stable atmosphere. This condition is not conducive for pesticide applications because droplets can remain suspended in the stable air mass. Additionally, inverted air temperatures and the subsequent stable air are likely involved in endo-loss and movement of volatilized droplets. Inversions can be caused by many factors including subsidence (sinking air that becomes warmer in temperature than the air below), radiative cooling, and frontal system collision (a cooler air mass that undercuts a warm air mass). Nocturnal inversions induced by radiative cooling are common in agricultural regions in the United States (Baker et al. 1969; Bish et al. 2019b; Bish and Bradley 2019b; Holzworth 1967; Holser 1961). However, inversions can occur during daytime hours as well. Fritz and colleagues (2008) used temperature probes at 0.5, 2.5, 5, 7.5, and 10 m AGL to monitor inversions at two sites in Texas: a coastal location and a land-locked location. They found daytime inversions were less persistent and had shorter durations than nocturnal inversions but did occur on >15% of days that were monitored, with 19% and 36% of days monitored having inversions between 11:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M. (Fritz et al. 2008). Morning and midday inversions between the heights of 2.5 and 10 m AGL lasted approximately 30 min on average and were approximately half as intense as evening inversions.
Depth and strength of inversion conditions are influenced by field surroundings. Figure 2 shows a 3-yr average of evening air temperatures and wind speeds in July for two locations in Missouri. Average inversions occurred from 46 cm to 305 cm AGL at the Hayward location. (Inverted conditions may have extended beyond 305 cm AGL; however, this was the highest point of measurement.) The low point of inversions at the Albany location was commonly 168 cm AGL. Topography likely functions in the differences observed between these locations (Bish et al. 2019b). The meteorological station at Albany sits in a low-lying area adjacent to a slight upward slope. This slope may serve as an obstruction and result in mechanical turbulence as air moves over the slope. Generated wind could impede the depth of the inversions.
Degradation of the inversion system allows pesticide droplets that were suspended in the stable air mass to deposit back to the earth's surface. Typically, nocturnal inversions degrade near sunrise as radiative warming begins and thermal turbulence increases. However, topography and field obstructions that result in mechanical turbulence can also result in premature dissipation of inversions. In the 3-yr inversion analysis, we found more variation in duration length and dissipation times of inversions at Albany compared to the other two locations (Bish et al. 2019b). Inversions at the Albany location were typically much shorter and more variable, whereas inversions at the Hayward location typically persisted through the evening, lasting on average 12 h. At the Columbia, Missouri location, inversions lasted approximately 11 h in April and became shorter as evenings grew longer, averaging approximately 7 h in length by July. Disruption of inversions occurred between 5:00 A.M. and 7:00 A.M. consistently at Hayward and Columbia, whereas this varied substantially at Albany.
Cool Air Drainage
Masses of cool air will not rise in altitude due to density; however, they can be moved by gentle horizontal winds. Sometimes this movement is associated with or labeled as cool air drainage. When moved, a dense cooler air mass sinks to the lowest area, thus it drains. Cool air drainage is most pronounced at the bases of mountains, valleys, or river bottoms. Frequently, bystanders can often feel the cooler air move through when standing in low-lying regions at or near sunset. General weather conditions favorable for drainage winds in valleys include clear skies, low humidity, light <5 m s-1, and ambient winds (Barr and Orgill 1989).
Drainage also occurs in open areas with mild terrain and/or limited shelters, such as many agricultural fields (Barr and Orgill 1989). In these locations, development of the cool air mass and subsequent drainage is frequently driven by radiative cooling and inversion formation. This is one reason that a pesticide applied during inversion conditions can result in movement several miles away as suspended droplets travel in the stable air mass as part of a cool air drainage system.
Similar to inversion formation, the drainage strength, depth, and structure are influenced by many factors (Barr and Orgill 1989). Drainage flow on a downward slope is likely to be shallow in depth on much of the agricultural land in the United States given a lack of vertical elevation differences (McNider and Pielke 1984). However, even smaller disruptions to the topography, such as terraces, may restrict or influence the flow pattern of cool air drainage (Mahrt et al. 2001). In a study conducted in southern Kansas and on a terrain that varied in elevation from 450 to 475 m AGL, cool air drainage was observed during evenings. However, the flow was always weak, and the layer of cool air was typically thin (usually 3 m or less AGL). Flow was typically disrupted during the evening and would reform on some evenings, but not consistently (Mahrt et al. 2001).
Degradation of a drainage system is typically induced by radiative heating and the increased thermal turbulence needed to disrupt the stable air mass. However, mechanical turbulence can also impede drainage. Examples of vertical obstructions in open fields that may generate mechanical turbulence include tree lines and buildings. In the Kansas study, cool air drainage occurred even on evenings when the opposing wind was moderate, moving 10 m s-1 at 60 m above ground, which would equate to approximately 1.4 m s-1 at 1 m above the ground (Mahrt et al. 2001; Oseland et al. 2020). It is possible that in agricultural lands with gentle side slopes and strong stratifications of cool air formation in the evening, a shallow drainage system would persist even in moderate winds (Mahrt et al. 2001). Gentle slopes may be beneficial in that they can act as a barrier for pesticide movement from the field during drainage conditions if the depth of the cool air drainage is shallow.
Shallow drainage systems degrade rapidly and as they are disrupted, herbicide particles settle out of the atmosphere. In relatively flat areas, observations of pesticide injury may be restricted to the lowest lying areas of the field. Drainage systems along rivers tends to be more pronounced due to more pronounced elevation differences. The larger depth (height) of such a drainage system requires more turbulence or stronger vertical winds to disrupt. Consequently, drainage systems in fields along river bottoms can persist longer and move farther, which provides an opportunity for pesticides to be transported over long distances.
Figure 3 is a time-lapse series following the release of a smoke bomb at a soybean field adjacent to a pipe river in Missouri. The river is on the other side of the distal tree line. The smoke plume moved vertically for the first 30 s, indicating a ground level inversion had not yet formed. However, as the plume reached the height similar to the top of the tree line, between 30 s and 1 min, it did not continue to dissipate but began sinking, indicative that it was part of a cooler air stream. The particulate did not disperse but moved as a dust cloud to the low point in the field, where it was visible for 3 min before dissipating. In the study by Oseland et al. (2020), we found that applications made near large bodies of water were more likely to move off target. This may be in part due to cool air drainage.
Removal of Pesticides from the Atmosphere
Pesticides suspended in the atmosphere are removed via five mechanisms: degradation of a stable air mass or drainage system, dry deposition, wet deposition, chemical degradation, and photochemical degradation (Glotfelty and Caro 1975). Virtually all airborne particles undergo one or a combination of these factors for their removal from the atmosphere.
In the same field where a smoke bomb was released to illustrate cool air drainage, and a few meters into the nearest tree line, sporadic damage that resembled dicamba and glyphosate injury (Figure 4) was observable at heights similar to those reached by the smoke plume in Figure 3. One possible explanation for the observed injury is that the pesticides moved into the air following application and in a similar fashion to the initial vertical rising of the smoke bomb. Another possibility is that the pesticides may have volatilized into the air. Regardless of how the pesticide moved into the air, horizontal winds likely moved the chemicals into the tree line where the leaf surfaces could have served as an obstruction to the horizontal air movement, allowing dry deposition of the chemical.
Dry deposition is the settling of pesticides that have sorbed onto suspended particulate matter in the atmosphere (Majewski and Capel 1996). Wet deposition occurs when particles are scavenged by raindrops and redistributed to the earth's surface. This is a rapid and predominant pathway for removal of pesticides from the atmosphere (Glotfelty and Caro 1975; Majewski and Capel 1996). Bulk deposition samplers are a common method of collecting wet and dry deposition samples for downstream analysis (Messing et al. 2014; Waite et al. 1995, 1999). Studies using either wet deposition or bulk deposition have been used to identify potential relationships between concentrations of pesticides removed from the atmosphere and usage of those pesticides within that region (Farenhorst et al. 2015; Goolsby et al. 1997; Thurman and Cromwell 2000; Waite et al. 2002, 2004). In a study of rainfall samples collected from 81 sites in the Midwest and Northeast United States in 1990 and 1991, Goolsby et al. (1997) found that peak concentrations of atrazine and alachlor were detected in May through July and deposition was highest in the corn belt and decreased with distance removed from the corn belt. Waite et al. (2004) found a similar relationship between dicamba and bulk deposition in Canadian prairies, in which dicamba concentrations peaked in June at ranges from 0.5 ng m-2 d-1 to approximately 1.7 ng m-2 d-1 depending on location and year. However, research is still needed to determine what concentration of dicamba (or any pesticide of interest) must be deposited from the atmosphere to result in injury of sensitive species.
Pesticide degradation is another mechanism that can act to remove chemicals from the atmosphere. Glotfley (1978) concluded that compounds able to strongly absorb solar wavelengths may be more likely to rapidly decompose. Factors that control the atmospheric half-life of a pesticide are difficult to study but likely important in understanding why some pesticides are more persistent in the atmosphere while others are not.
Practical Applications
Elaborate and extensive studies have been and continue being conducted on physical drift of pesticides (Alves 2017; Carlson et al. 2006; Johnson et al. 2006; Vangessel 2005; Vieira et al. 2020). Producers and agricultural professionals have readily adopted the outcome(s) from many of those findings whether it be nozzle size, drift reduction agents, and so on (Bish and Bradley 2017). To achieve similar results with regards to secondary movement of pesticides, producers and agricultural professionals will need more education on secondary pesticide movement and new best management practices and tools to adopt. The concepts of cool air drainage and inversion can easily be demonstrated with smoke bombs (Figures 3 and 5) and/or liquid nitrogen, which can provide a good example of cool air sinking and moving. Applicators need to understand that topography and obstructions in fields will influence formation of stable air masses. An inversion may be occurring in one field and not yet formed in a nearby field (Bish and Bradley 2019b). Inversion forecasting tools continue to be developed. However, developing accurate tools that predict inversions near the ground, reliably and across multiple topographies is a difficult task (Bish et al. 2019b).
From a research perspective, more consideration needs to be given to all of the potential effects of wind. Measuring wind speed at boom height at the time of application seems acceptable for concerns about physical drift. However, with regard to secondary transport of pesticides, is there a height about ground level for which wind speeds can be measured and used to predict the likelihood of an application remaining on target?
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency published a study in 2006 showing that some agricultural areas pose higher risks for off-target pesticide movement (Pfleeger 2006). The percent of land in agriculture, diversity of crops, rates of herbicide use in a given area, and frequency of high winds were all factors that affected the risks of physical drift to nearby sensitive species (Pfleeger 2006). Perhaps a similar study is warranted that considers the effects of a lack of wind on secondary pesticide movement.
With increased public awareness of pesticides, the release of multiple herbicide-resistant traits, and concerns over environmental fate, it is essential we not become complacent in our assumptions about secondary movement but advance our understanding above what is currently known.