A method for identifying optimum strategies of measuring soil water contents for calibrating a root water uptake model

2000 ◽  
Vol 227 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 273-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.A.D. Musters ◽  
W. Bouten
2019 ◽  
Vol 124 ◽  
pp. 96-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faisal Hayat ◽  
Mutez Ali Ahmed ◽  
Mohsen Zarebanadkouki ◽  
Gaochao Cai ◽  
Andrea Carminati

1999 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Y. Li ◽  
J. B. Boisvert ◽  
R. De Jong

Macroscopic root-water-extraction models often do not adequately account for the non-uniform distribution of roots in the soil profile. We developed an exponential root-water-uptake model, which was derived from a measured root density distribution function. The model, incorporated in the Soil-Water-Atmosphere-Plant (SWAP) simulation model, was tested on a clay loam soil cropped to soybeans and on a sandy loam soil cropped to corn, near Ottawa. Comparisons of measured and simulated soil water contents with the exponential model, a linear depth-dependent model and a constant-extraction-rate model were also made. The exponential model performed satisfactorily (average relative errors <20%) when used to simulate measured field soil water contents at various depths. The constant-extraction-rate model overestimated the soil water contents in the upper part of the soil profile (maximum error 0.24 cm3 cm−3) and underestimated them (maximum error −0.09 cm3 cm−3) in the lower part. The exponential model and the linear model performed fairly similarly at the lower depths, but the exponential model gave better results in the near-surface horizons. The exponential model was sensitive to the root distribution coefficient and to the rooting depth, when the latter was approximately less than 40 cm. The results of this study suggest that the exponential root-water-uptake model as incorporated in SWAP is an improvement over those models, which do not account for the root distribution in the soil. Key words: SWAP, soil water simulation, root distribution, corn, soybeans, sensitivity analysis


1987 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-406
Author(s):  
C. Dirksen

With closed, high-frequency irrigation systems, the water supply can be tailored to the instant needs of plants. To be able to do this optimally, it is necessary to understand how plants interact with their environment. To study water uptake under a variety of non-uniform conditions in the root zone, lucerne was grown in laboratory soil columns with automated gamma ray attenuation, tensiometer and salinity sensor equipment to measure soil water contents, pressure potentials and osmotic potentials, respectively. The columns were irrigated with water of different salinity at various frequencies and leaching fractions. This paper presents results obtained in a column irrigated daily with water of conductivity 0.33 S/m (h0 = -13.2 m) at a target leaching fraction of 0.08. This includes the drying and wetting patterns under daily irrigations in deficit and excess of evapotranspiration, respectively. After 230 days the salination of the column had still not reached a steady state. Salinity increased rapidly with depth and root water uptake was shallow for the deep-rooting lucerne. Water and salt transport under daily irrigation cannot be described without taking hysteresis of soil water retention into account. The data presented are suitable for testing various water uptake models, once numerical water and salt transport models of the required complexity are operational. (Abstract retrieved from CAB Abstracts by CABI’s permission)


1990 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 697 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Eastham ◽  
CW Rose ◽  
DM Cameron ◽  
SJ Rance ◽  
T Talsma ◽  
...  

Patterns of water uptake throughout a drying period of approximately one year were investigated under trees and pasture at three tree densities in an agroforestry experiment, and related to tree and pasture rooting patterns and water use. A greater proportion of soil water was extracted from deep in the soil profile under the densely planted trees, owing to lower soil water contents in upper horizons and deeper and more dense rooting systems than at lower tree densities. As the drought period progressed, the ratios of tree transpiration rate and pasture evaporation rate to equilibrium evaporation rate tended to decrease at each tree density as soil water contents in upper horizons decreased, and an increasing proportion of water was extracted from deeper soil horizons. At each tree density, the rate of water uptake per unit root length was lowest in surface soil horizons and tended to increase with increasing soil depth. The rate of water uptake per unit root length tended to increase with time in deeper, wetter soil horizons and decrease with time in surface soil horizons as soil water content decreased.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 1759
Author(s):  
Said A. Hamido ◽  
Kelly T. Morgan

The availability and proper irrigation scheduling of water are some of the most significant limitations on citrus production in Florida. The proper volume of citrus water demand is vital in evaluating sustainable irrigation approaches. The current study aims to determine the amount of irrigation required to grow citrus trees at higher planting densities without detrimental impacts on trees’ water relation parameters. The study was conducted between November 2017 and September 2020 on young sweet orange (Citrus sinensis) trees budded on the ‘US-897’ (Cleopatra mandarin x Flying Dragon trifoliate orange) citrus rootstock transplanted in sandy soil at the Southwest Florida Research and Education Center (SWFREC) demonstration grove, near Immokalee, Florida. The experiment contained six planting densities, including 447, 598, and 745 trees per ha replicated four times, and 512, 717, and 897 trees per ha replicated six times. Each density treatment was irrigated at 62% or 100% during the first 15 months between 2017 and 2019 or one of the four irrigation rates (26.5, 40.5, 53, or 81%) based on the calculated crop water supplied (ETc) during the last 17 months of 2019–2020. Tree water relations, including soil moisture, stem water potential, and water supplied, were collected periodically. In addition, soil salinity was determined. During the first year (2018), a higher irrigation rate (100% ETc) represented higher soil water contents; however, the soil water content for the lower irrigation rate (62% ETc) did not represent biological stress. One emitter per tree regardless of planting density supported stem water potential (Ψstem) values between −0.80 and −0.79 MPa for lower and full irrigation rates, respectively. However, when treatments were adjusted from April 2019 through September 2020, the results substantially changed. The higher irrigation rate (81% ETc) represented higher soil water contents during the remainder of the study, the lower irrigation rate (26.5% ETc) represents biological stress as a result of stem water potential (Ψstem) values between −1.05 and −0.91 MPa for lower and higher irrigation rates, respectively. Besides this, increasing the irrigation rate from 26.5% to 81%ETc decreased the soil salinity by 33%. Although increasing the planting density from 717 to 897 trees per hectare reduced the water supplied on average by 37% when one irrigation emitter was used to irrigate two trees instead of one, applying an 81% ETc irrigation rate in citrus is more efficient and could be managed in commercial groves.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (No. 3) ◽  
pp. 85-98
Author(s):  
Dohnal Michal ◽  
Dušek Jaromír ◽  
Vogel Tomáš ◽  
Herza Jiří

This paper focuses on numerical modelling of soil water movement in response to the root water uptake that is driven by transpiration. The flow of water in a lysimeter, installed at a grass covered hillslope site in a small headwater catchment, is analysed by means of numerical simulation. The lysimeter system provides a well defined control volume with boundary fluxes measured and soil water pressure continuously monitored. The evapotranspiration intensity is estimated by the Penman-Monteith method and compared with the measured lysimeter soil water loss and the simulated root water uptake. Variably saturated flow of water in the lysimeter is simulated using one-dimensional dual-permeability model based on the numerical solution of the Richards&rsquo; equation. The availability of water for the root water uptake is determined by the evaluation of the plant water stress function, integrated in the soil water flow model. Different lower boundary conditions are tested to compare the soil water dynamics inside and outside the lysimeter. Special attention is paid to the possible influence of the preferential flow effects on the lysimeter soil water balance. The adopted modelling approach provides a useful and flexible framework for numerical analysis of soil water dynamics in response to the plant transpiration.


Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fairouz Slama ◽  
Nessrine Zemni ◽  
Fethi Bouksila ◽  
Roberto De Mascellis ◽  
Rachida Bouhlila

Water scarcity and quality degradation represent real threats to economic, social, and environmental development of arid and semi-arid regions. Drip irrigation associated to Deficit Irrigation (DI) has been investigated as a water saving technique. Yet its environmental impacts on soil and groundwater need to be gone into in depth especially when using brackish irrigation water. Soil water content and salinity were monitored in a fully drip irrigated potato plot with brackish water (4.45 dSm−1) in semi-arid Tunisia. The HYDRUS-1D model was used to investigate the effects of different irrigation regimes (deficit irrigation (T1R, 70% ETc), full irrigation (T2R, 100% ETc), and farmer’s schedule (T3R, 237% ETc) on root water uptake, root zone salinity, and solute return flows to groundwater. The simulated values of soil water content (θ) and electrical conductivity of soil solution (ECsw) were in good agreement with the observation values, as indicated by mean RMSE values (≤0.008 m3·m−3, and ≤0.28 dSm−1 for soil water content and ECsw respectively). The results of the different simulation treatments showed that relative yield accounted for 54%, 70%, and 85.5% of the potential maximal value when both water and solute stress were considered for deficit, full. and farmer’s irrigation, respectively. Root zone salinity was the lowest and root water uptake was the same with and without solute stress for the treatment corresponding to the farmer’s irrigation schedule (273% ETc). Solute return flows reaching the groundwater were the highest for T3R after two subsequent rainfall seasons. Beyond the water efficiency of DI with brackish water, long term studies need to focus on its impact on soil and groundwater salinization risks under changing climate conditions.


Soil Science ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 169 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Zuo ◽  
Lei Meng ◽  
Renduo Zhang

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document