Title: Screening Deficit Irrigation Strategies Using Crop Growth Simulation
1Screening Deficit Irrigation Strategies Using
Crop Growth Simulation R. Louis Baumhardt and
Scott A. Staggenborg USDA-ARS Conservation and
Production Res. Lab. Bushland, TX Kansas State
University Plant Science Center, Manhattan, KS
2- Well capacity has declined with the decreasing
water table. - The choice is between deficit irrigation or
concentrating water to adequately irrigate a
portion.
3Irrigation-strategy Question
- Will uniformly spreading water resources to
deficit irrigate a large area produce more or
less crop yield than if that same water resource
was concentrated to irrigate a smaller area and
averaged with the complementary dryland area?
Uniformly Irrigate
Variably Irrigate
4APPROACH
- Use crop growth simulators (SORKAM and GOSSYM)
and recorded weather at Bushland from 1958-1999
to calculate sorghum grain and cotton lint yields
for several deficit irrigation combinations. - Determine crop growth and yield response to
deficit irrigation levels for various planting
practices or cultivar maturity.
5IRRIGATION PARAMETERS
- Irrigation 7 d application interval and 4
capacity levels - No Irrigation Rain only
- Irrigation Rain 2.5 mm d-1 (2 gpm/ac)
- Irrigation Rain 3.75 mm d-1 (3 gpm/ac)
- Irrigation Rain 5.0 mm d-1 (4 gpm/ac)
6OTHER FACTORS
- Sorghum
- Cultivar Maturity Early (15-leaf), Medium
(17-leaf), Late (19-leaf) - Planting Date 15 May, 5 June,
25 June - Cotton
- Irrigation Duration 4 and 8 weeks
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8MODEL VALIDATION
9Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for a Common Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combination
Type Irrigation Cultivar Maturity Planting Date Planting Date Simulated Yield Simulated Yield Weighted Average Yield Weighted Average Yield Base Yield
mm d-1 _____ kg ha-1 _____ _____ kg ha-1 _____ _____ kg ha-1 _____ _____ kg ha-1 _____
UNIFORM 2.5 Medium Medium 5 June 5 June 5130 5130 5130 100
21 3.75 Medium Medium 5 June 5 June 7150 7150 6070 118
Dryland Medium Medium 5 June 5 June 3920 3920
11 5.0 Medium Medium 5 June 5 June 7720 7720 5820 113
Dryland Medium Medium 5 June 5 June 3920 3920
10Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations Mean Simulated Sorghum Yield for Unique Optimum Cultivar, Planting Date, and Irrigation Combinations
Type Irrigation Cultivar Maturity Planting Date Planting Date Simulated Yield Simulated Yield Weighted Average Yield Weighted Average Yield Base Yield
mm d-1 _____ kg ha-1 _____ _____ kg ha-1 _____ _____ kg ha-1 _____ _____ kg ha-1 _____
UNIFORM 2.5 Early Early 5 June 5 June 5180 5180 5180 101
21 3.75 Late Late 5 June 5 June 7280 7280 6280 122
Dryland Early Early 5 June 5 June 4280 4280
11 5.0 Late Late 15 May 15 May 8160 8160 6220 121
Dryland Early Early 5 June 5 June 4280 4280
11 Dryland 5.0 mmd-1
21 3.75 mmd-1 Dryland
UNIFORM 2.5 mmd-1
11SUMMARY
- Simulated grain yield increased with increasing
irrigation, but simulations also reflect
generally better WUE at 3.75 mm d-1 than at 5.0
mm d-1 irrigation levels. - The weighted average grain yield for variable
irrigation strategies with a dryland component
increased net grain yield from 13 to gt20 over
uniformly irrigated sorghum.
12CONCLUSION
- For declining water resources, converting uniform
deficit irrigation (water spreading) of a
determinate crop like grain sorghum to variable
irrigation that concentrates water on smaller
areas with a complementary dryland area will
increase overall sorghum grain yield.
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14SIMULATED COTTON YIELD vs IRRIGATION STRATEGIES
15CONCLUSION
- Cotton yield levels are maintained or increased
by converting from uniform deficit irrigation
(water spreading) to variable irrigation on part
of a field (concentrating water) with a
complementary dryland area.
16Wheat-Sorghum-Fallow Rotation
- Two crops in three years,
- Storage of precipitation as soil water,
- Stable grain crop yields
1735? 11 N, 102? 5 WElevation 1170 mGrowing
season 181 d