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  2. Aerial topdressing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_topdressing

    They then landed and examined the spread of the seeds. It was found a distribution of 1 seed per square foot was obtained from a height of 100 to 150 feet (46 m). On Monday 10 March, they sowed 375 acres (1.52 km 2), using 2 lb/acre (224 kg/km 2) instead of the 5 lb/acre (560 kg/km 2) used when sowing by hand. The pair returned to examine the ...

  3. Aerial application - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_application

    Most notably, in 2009, the European Union prohibited aerial spraying of pesticides with a few highly-restricted exceptions in article 9 of Directive 2009/128/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a framework for Community action to achieve the sustainable use of pesticides, which effectively ended most aerial application ...

  4. Sprayer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprayer

    Sprayers range in size from man-portable units (typically backpacks with spray guns) to trailed sprayers that are connected to a tractor, to self-propelled units similar to tractors with boom mounts of 4–30 feet (1.2–9.1 m) up to 60–151 feet (18–46 m) in length depending on engineering design for tractor and land size. [1]

  5. Agricultural aircraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_aircraft

    The CA-28 was a crop spraying aircraft of the 1950s. Aerial spraying has been controversial since the 1960s, due to environmental concerns about pesticide drift (raised for example by Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring). It is now often subject to restrictions, for example spraying pesticide is generally banned in Sweden, although exceptions ...

  6. Shotcrete - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shotcrete

    The high spray outputs and large cross-sections require the work to be mechanised. Concrete spraying systems with duplex pumps are mainly used for working with wet mixes. Unlike conventional concrete pumps, these systems have to meet the additional requirement of delivering a concrete flow that is as constant as possible, and therefore ...

  7. Pesticides in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pesticides_in_the_United...

    In the same report, it added the "yield loss plus increased herbicide cost may result in an average estimated loss of $28 per acre" if atrazine were unavailable to corn farmers. [4] In 2006, the EPA concluded that the triazine herbicides posed "no harm that would result to the general U.S. population, infants, children or other... consumers." [5]

  8. Environmental impact of pesticides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_impact_of...

    Ground spraying produces less pesticide drift than aerial spraying does. [54] Farmers can employ a buffer zone around their crop, consisting of empty land or non-crop plants such as Evergreen trees to serve as windbreaks and absorb the pesticides, preventing drift into other areas. [55] Such windbreaks are legally required in the Netherlands. [55]

  9. Indoor residual spraying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indoor_residual_spraying

    Indoor residual spraying in Kenya in 2017. Indoor residual spraying or IRS is the process of spraying the inside of dwellings with an insecticide to kill mosquitoes that spread malaria. A dilute solution of insecticide is sprayed on the inside walls of certain types of dwellings—those with walls made from porous materials such as mud or wood ...

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