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Sample questions
When making a liquid spray application, which change makes the spray droplets MORE likely to drift off-target?
- Using larger spray droplets
- Spraying only when the wind is calm (under about 10 mph)
- Lowering the spray boom closer to the target
- Increasing the spray pressure, which produces smaller droplets ✓
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Pesticide 'runoff' that can contaminate surface water happens when:
- Pesticide vapors drift downwind onto a neighboring property
- Water from rain or irrigation carries the pesticide across the soil surface into streams, rivers, or other surface water ✓
- Sunlight breaks the pesticide down into new chemicals
- The pesticide binds to soil particles and stays in place
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A pesticide with a LONG half-life is one that:
- Breaks down slowly, so it persists in the environment longer and can build up with repeated applications ✓
- Breaks down within a few hours of application
- Is automatically classified as a restricted-use pesticide
- Cannot dissolve in water under any conditions
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Applying a broad-spectrum, residual insecticide can sometimes trigger a secondary pest outbreak (for example, a spider-mite flare-up). The main reason is that the insecticide also:
- Increases the target pest's resistance overnight
- Raises the soil pH enough to favor mites
- Makes the treated plants more nutritious to pests
- Kills the natural enemies (predators and parasites) that had been keeping the secondary pest in check ✓
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Which property makes a pesticide MORE likely to leach down through the soil and contaminate groundwater?
- It dissolves easily in water and breaks down slowly in the environment ✓
- It binds tightly to soil particles
- It evaporates quickly after application
- It has a very short half-life
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