Water Use by Legumes and its Effect on Soil Water Status

Crop Science ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 1212-1216 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Badaruddin ◽  
D. W. Meyer
1975 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 871 ◽  
Author(s):  
GG Johns ◽  
RCG Smith

The accuracy of six published functions for deriving dryland water use from evaporative demand and soil water status was assessed by incorporating them in water budgets which were used to estimate dryland soil water status from actual climatic records. Budget-derived estimates were compared with values actually measured under improved pastures in the field over an 842 day period. The root mean square (RMS) of the differences between computed and observed soil water values was used to evaluate the various functions. RMS values were found to vary from 8.1 to 29.5 mm for the various functions tested. Soil water estimations made by using a simple ratio function were generally as good as or better than those made by using more complex functions. The sensitivity of the various functions to changes in their input assumptions was tested. The results of these tests will facilitate the selection of the optimum functions for conditions other than those encountered in this study. Reduced accuracy of soil water prediction resulted from the use of functions to set water use equal to the potential rate, regardless of the overall dryness of the soil profile, whenever recent rainfall was calculated to have made water available in the surface zone.


2017 ◽  
Vol 225 ◽  
pp. 525-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tarek K. Zin El-Abedin ◽  
Mohamed A. Mattar ◽  
A.A. Alazba ◽  
Hussein M. Al-Ghobari

1995 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 33 ◽  
Author(s):  
AB Samarakoon ◽  
WJ Muller ◽  
RM Gifford

Transpiration rate, leaf area expansion, water use and water-use efficiency (WUE) of spaced plants of wheat (cvv. Matong and Quarrion), were examined at ambient and twice ambient CO2 concentrations in wet and drying soil regimes. A hypothesis tested was that both stomatal conductance (gs) and leaf area development are so regulated by the plant in relation to soil water status that the reduction of approximately 40% in gs in high CO2 has no permanent impact on whole-plant water use. Whereas, during a soil drying cycle, leaf area increase under elevated CO2 counterbalanced closely for reduced gs in terms of soil water depletion as reported elsewhere, this counterbalance was neither exact at all times, nor did it apply when the soil was continuously wet. In wet soil, leaf area was not enhanced much by elevated CO2, probably because, under the high radiation and nutritional conditions used, the tillering rate was almost maximal anyway. Quarrion, having a 40% lower gs than Matong genetically, did not counter-balance a reduced transpiration rate with a larger leaf area under either drying or wet soil conditions. These results support rejection, for wheat, of the hypothesis posed; elevated CO2 increased leaf area mainly by virtue of the direct photosynthetic increase rather than changed soil water status. In wet soil, low gs Quarrion had a higher CO2 effect on WUE (+ 73 to 82%) than did Matong (+54 to 65%). In drying soil, both cultivars had a similar increase in WUE at high CO2 (+60 to 68%).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra María Martínez-Pedreño ◽  
Pablo Berríos ◽  
Abdelmalek Temnani ◽  
Susana Zapata ◽  
Manuel Forcén ◽  
...  

<p>In water scarcity areas, it is necessary not only reducing the water applied as much as possible, but also optimizing nutrients application to avoid soil salinization and aquifers pollution because of leaching bellow the root zone. Increasing the sustainability of fertirrigation needs technology to adjust the irrigation time, knowing more precisely the soil water retention capacity and facilitate water absorption by the crop. The aim of this trial was to establish protocols for sustainable fertirrigation in melon crop under semi-arid conditions, both at an environmental and economic level, based on the use of soil water status indicators measured by sensors that allow us to increase the irrigation water use efficiency. Two irrigation treatments were established: i) Control (CTL), irrigated to satisfy the water requirements of the crop, according to the farmer's criterion throughout the crop cycle and ii) DI, deficit irrigation, irrigated to allow a maximum soil water depletion of 20%, with respect to field capacity throughout the crop cycle, from sensors located below the 20 cm depth horizon, in order to limit water leaching into the soil. An experimental design was established with 4 repetitions per treatment distributed at random, with 5 plants per repetition. Macro and micronutrients concentration of soil solution, leaves and fruits were analysed. The crop water status was determined fortnightly by measurements taken at solar midday of stem water potential, net photosynthesis, evapotranspiration rate and leaf conductance. Whereas photosynthetically active radiation absorption, basal stem and fruit equatorial diameters were determined to estimate plant and fruit growth. The physical (longitudinal and equatorial fruit diameters, fruit weight, pulp width and firmness) and chemical (titratable acidity, pH and total soluble solid of the juice, total phenolic content, total antioxidant capacity and total ascorbic acid) characteristics of harvested fruits were determined. Total water applied in CTL treatment was 3,254 m<sup>3</sup> ha<sup>-1</sup> throughout the crop cycle whereas DI received 2,284 m<sup>3</sup> ha<sup>-1</sup>, a 29.8% lower. In both cases, the volume of water applied was lower than recommended by FAO. The regulation of the irrigation time in the DI treatment respect to the CTL promoted a reduction of the soil water content from 30 cm depth, mitigating the water loss below the root system, along with a lower contribution of nutrients, around of 43, 41.8 and 22% of N, P and K, respectively, and less salinization of the soil profile. No significant difference between treatments was detected in the concentration of these nutrients at leaf level. No difference was observed at harvest, with 0.53 and 0.59 g fruit g<sup>-1</sup> total dry mass of harvest index in CTL and DI, respectively. Fruit quality was not negatively affected in DI but improved since ascorbic acid was higher. This means that DI treatment not only did not negatively affect the crop water status and the amount and quality of the yield, but also improved its biochemical quality while reducing water and nutrients use and leaching.</p>


Agronomy ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1315
Author(s):  
Xun Bo Zhou ◽  
Guo Yun Wang ◽  
Li Yang ◽  
Hai Yan Wu

Low water availability coupled with poor planting method has posed a great challenge to winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) productivity. To improve productivity and water use efficiency (WUE) under deficit irrigation, an effective water-saving technology that is characterized by three planting modes has been developed (uniform with 30-cm row spacing (U), double-double row spacing of 5 cm (DD), and furrow-ridge row spacing of alternated 20 cm and 40 cm (F)) combined with three irrigation regimes (50 mm water each at growth stage 34 (GS34) and GS48 (W1), and 100 mm water at GS48 (W2), or 100 mm each water at GS34 and GS48 (W3)). Results showed that DD increased yield by 9.7% and WUE by 12.6% due to higher soil water status and less soil water depletion and evapotranspiration compared with U. Although the soil water status, soil water depletion, evapotranspiration, and yield increased with increasing irrigation amount, more soil water depletion and evapotranspiration resulted in low WUE. The deficit irrigation was beneficial for improving WUE as W1 had significantly increased yield by 5.4% and WUE by 7.1% compared with W2. Yield and evapotranspiration showed a quadratic dynamic equation indicating that yield increased with increasing evapotranspiration. Considering WUE and relatively higher yield under deficit water, W1 combined with DD is suggested to be a good management strategy to be applied in winter wheat of water-scarce regions.


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