Abstract
SUMMARY: Unobstructed splash dispersal patterns were measured in the absence of rain over mown grass using a fluorescent tracer, and a colorimetric method was used indoors in still air. When drops fell into a thin horizontal water film 0–1 mm deep, the volume of the incident drops dissipated as splash droplets was similar to the volume splashed from the film, irrespective of the distance of fall of the drops. Drop size, angle of inclination and distance of fall had significant effects on the volume of drops splashed from an inclined surface. The effects of rigidity, inclination and nature of surface were found to be significant when drops impacted onto surfaces with or without a wax covering and either rigidly or loosely supported. When splash‐ and dry‐air‐dispersed Lycopodium spores were simultaneously released, many more splashed spores were caught close to the source, but the dispersal gradient of splashed spores was steeper than that of dry‐air‐dispersed spores. Splash‐dispersed spores were caught on slides, cylinders and rotorods but trap efficiency could not be evaluated.

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