1. Introduction
In California and much of the western US, municipal, agricultural, and environmental demands increasingly compete for limited water supplies. Continued environmental and regulatory constraints on water supplies in California are anticipated as the effects of population growth, climate change, and declining water conveyance infrastructure continue to evolve. To address these challenges, there is a need to provide new sources of information on crop water use to growers, to enhance their ability to efficiently manage available irrigation water supplies.
California leads the nation in cash farm receipts, and is a major domestic and international supplier of horticultural specialty crops. Such crops, broadly including vegetables, melons, fruits and nuts, generate about 75% of the state’s crop sales value [
1]. Yet, the growth stages and phenology of many horticultural crops tend to be difficult to generalize due to variations in cultivar, planting density, and cultural practice. Growth stage and crop size are important because canopy light interception is a primary determinant of crop water requirement.
Estimates of crop evapotranspiration (ETc) can support efficient irrigation management. ETc represents the combined processes of crop transpiration and evaporation from the soil surface. A common approach to irrigation scheduling is to calculate ETc by applying a crop coefficient (Kc), which is a dimensionless value generally of range 0.1–1.2, to reference evapotranspiration (ETo), which captures the effect of weather on the atmosphere’s evaporating power. The California Irrigation Management Information System (CIMIS) automated weather station network provides daily ETo values, which estimate ET from a well-watered grass surface, gridded across the entire state at 2 km resolution [
2,
3]. The resulting ETc can help irrigation managers schedule irrigation timing and quantity. Guideline Kc values are available for several crops under idealized phenology expressed as four growth stages (initial, development, mid-season, late-season), as from the FAO-56 procedures [
4]. The initial stage is associated with crop emergence and establishment, generally running from planting date to about 10% ground cover. During the ensuing development stage, the crop grows to its maximum cover and Kc. The mid-season stage is a sustained period at maximum Kc, followed by a late-season stage that, depending on crop type, may continue at maximum Kc or may decline due to crop senescence. It should be noted that FAO-56 and other tabulations, however valuable, are intended as a general guide. Actual crop development and water use in a field depends on planting configuration and cultural practice, as well as climatic condition, thus local observations of plant stage development are recommended where possible.
Canopy light interception is a main driver of ETc and hence Kc. Fractional green canopy cover (Fc) is a readily measured property that is a good indicator of light interception. As such, accurate and efficient estimation of actual Fc might allow improved scheduling and allocation of irrigation water [
5–
8]. Several studies have related Fc, or the closely related metric, fractional ground shaded area, to specialty crop water use [
9–
14]. This paper is largely based on a multi-year USDA study in the San Joaquin Valley (SJV) that used a weighing lysimeter, which provides the most accurate measure of daily crop water use, to relate Fc to Kcb for several key vegetable crops: broccoli, bellpepper, head lettuce, and garlic [
15]. These crops together, account for about 25% of the state’s vegetable acreage and revenue. As is becoming more common in commercial operations, subsurface drip irrigation was used after the initial (crop establishment) growth stage. Water was applied directly to the root zone in small (2 mm) quantities several times a day to avoid surface wetting and associated direct evaporation from the soil surface. In this way, the lysimeter study measured water use relating primarily to plant transpiration. Strong relationships were observed between Fc, which was measured periodically during each growing season, and basal crop coefficient (Kcb), which represents ET of an unstressed crop on a dry soil surface. Kcb maximum values per crop were close to FAO specifications. The purpose of the lysimeter study was to improve irrigation management of vegetable crops, and the possibility of achieving of full yield potential with reduced water was established in some cases.
Additional studies have shown that various spectral vegetation indices, calculated from visible and near-infrared (NIR) reflectance data, are linearly related to canopy light interception [
16–
22]. Additional research in SJV shows a strong relationship between Landsat normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and Fc for multiple horticultural crops [
23]. As such, it appears that indices such as NDVI can potentially track canopy development and light interception.
A remote sensing approach, implemented in regions with an available ETo network, potentially enables timely estimation of crop water use for resource monitoring and irrigation scheduling [
24]. A key advantage of remote sensing is the ability to directly observe crop development, hence negating the need for idealized growth stage assumptions. This study had two primary research objectives. Objective 1 characterized the relationship between satellite NDVI and fractional cover of major SJV crop types. The SJV is a highly diverse agricultural region, and definition of a generalized NDVI-Fc relationship was intended to support further research into applications that require crop development data. Objective 2 provided an example use of such observations in support of crop evapotranspiration estimation. Under this objective, NDVI imagery was combined with prior lysimeter-based equations and CIMIS ETo data to track crop development and water use of several SJV commercial vegetable fields.
4. Summary and Conclusions
Landsat Thematic Mapper reflective bands supported the estimation of basal crop evapotranspiration (ETcb) for several San Joaquin Valley (SJV) vegetable fields during 2008. Landsat-5 L1T terrain-corrected images were transformed to surface reflectance and converted to normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) at 30 m spatial resolution. The NDVI was strongly related to green fractional cover across a broad variety of SJV annual and perennial crop types and maturity levels, and was used to estimate fractional cover over crop cycles of several study fields. Results from this portion of the study indicate that satellite NDVI can provide robust field-specific and regional estimates of Fc for specialty and other SJV crops, without need for crop type or supporting data or information beyond that needed for atmospheric correction. Prior relationships developed by weighing lysimeter were then used to convert fractional cover to basal crop coefficient. Finally, these coefficients were combined with reference evapotranspiration measurements from the California Irrigation Management Information System agricultural network to estimate basal crop evapotranspiration per overpass date. Temporal profiles of all variables were thus developed for four vegetable crops in several individual fields, along with estimates of daily and cumulative water use. Errors in satellite based fractional cover (Fc) estimation produced uncertainties of <0.5 mm/d for the crops examined here, with seasonal retrieval uncertainties of 6–10%. The results were compared with prior lysimeter experiments and FAO-56 planning guidelines.
The results then suggest that an optical satellite-based approach implemented in regions with an available reference ET (ETo) network, especially when combined with available 5–7 day ETo forecasts, may facilitate timely estimation of crop water use for support of resource monitoring and irrigation scheduling. While such observations can augment FAO-56 or other operational crop coefficient methods by monitoring actual crop development [
30], resulting ETcb estimates must be supplemented with ancillary information to derive actual evapotranspiration (ETa) under conditions of crop water stress, which is not typically an issue for the high-value vegetable crops examined here excepting garlic during drydown. Extra information is required as well to account for soil surface evaporation resulting from irrigation operations or precipitation. Yet, compared with direct ETa estimation procedures that involve energy balance remote sensing [
31], vegetation index methods are more approachable and can be less costly to implement [
32]. Further, by avoiding the need for thermal imagery, vegetation index methods can potentially exploit viewing opportunities offered by a larger variety of satellite and airborne imaging systems [
33] and can generate output at higher spatial resolution for use on smaller fields.
Future study might further address the extent to which texture or moisture related differences in soil reflectance affect NDVI based retrieval of Fc more broadly throughout SJV. Such study might explore the use of alternative vegetation indices that are less influenced by soil background such as the Soil Adjusted Vegetation Index and related transforms [
34,
35]. Among other things however, potential use of such indices in an operational context should be evaluated for cloud shadow sensitivity, where NDVI retrievals are fairly robust. Additional work could be done to quantify Fc and ETcb uncertainties related to presence of non-crop vegetation (cover crop, weeds). Such vegetation is not prevalent in SJV vegetable production, but might pose an important confusion factor with other crop types at least at certain times of year. Further verification should be performed on mature orchards to evaluate conformity with the NDVI-Fc response function observed here.