A Comparison of Ground-based Air-blast Sprayer and Aircraft Application of Fungicides to Manage Scab in Tall Pecan Trees

2020 
Pecan scab (caused by Venturia effusa) is a destructive disease of pecan in the southeastern United States. Susceptible cultivars must be sprayed with fungicide every 10 to 21 days to ensure yield and kernel quality. Fungicide is most often applied using large orchard air-blast sprayers. Pecan trees grow tall, and air-blast sprays result in a gradient in spray deposition and consequently of scab. Aerial fungicide application is also practiced. Disease distribution and spray deposition of the two methods have not been compared but will provide information aiding decisions on spray application methods. We compared air-blast, aerial, and air-blast + aerial applications for efficacy controlling scab at five heights in the canopy of 25-m cultivar Schley pecan trees. There was a negative relationship between scab severity and height in control trees, a positive linear relationship with height in air-blast treated trees, and a generally negative linear relationship between scab severity and height in aerially treated trees. Air-blast + aerial treatments resulted in low severity of scab at all heights. Spray deposition on water-sensitive cards indicated a declining gradient with height using an air-blast sprayer, whereas aerial applications resulted in a low deposition at all sample heights. Air-blast sprays tended to result in less good control at heights >12.5 m, and aerially treated trees at
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