As is unavoidable with a story that’s so rapidly changing – dicamba is banned! Dicamba is restricted! Dicamba led to an actual murder! – it can be hard to get a sense of the full picture. Kevin Bradley over at the University of Missouri has been tracking dicamba closely, and put together two maps that show in a nice, broad sense the impact of dicamba: how many acres of farmland have been affected, and how many complaints have been lodged?

Dicamba is not particularly new, but dicamba-resistant soybean seeds are, as are newer versions of dicamba that Monsanto and BASF – the companies behind the pesticide – claim are designed to be sprayed on them. But dicamba has shown a tendency to vaporize extremely rapidly and drift onto neighboring farms, and if those farms have not used dicamba-resistant seed, the drift is incredibly destructive. (Monsanto has laid the blame for the drift at the feet of farmers, claiming that they’ve been properly following the directions. Farmers have said the directions are nearly impossible to follow.)

There has been an avalanche of criminal complaints regarding dicamba, and many reports of affected farmland. Bradley’s maps, using data from various state departments of agriculture and weed scientists, summarizes all of that. The data is accurate as of October 15th.

Dicamba-Related Injury Cases Currently Under Investigation

It shows 2,708 dicamba-related cases in progress, ranging from North Dakota to Louisiana, and as far east as North Carolina. The state with the single highest number of cases is Arkansas, with 986. Arkansas was one of the states that issued a temporary ban on the sale and use of dicamba this summer.

Acres of Dicamba-Injured Soybeans

The map of affected acreage is even scarier, ranging to the east coast as far north as Pennsylvania and as far south as Georgia. Arkansas again was hit the hardest, but the Dakotas and Minnesota were severely damaged as well. Altogether, Bradley’s map shows 3.6 million acres of soybean fields damaged by dicamba.

Whether the recent decision to make dicamba a restricted-use pesticide will result in less damage is unclear, especially as big chunks of the affected areas enter winter.