Potential and Actual Water Savings through Improved Irrigation Scheduling in Small-Scale Vegetable Production
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- irrigation scheduling according to the Water Chart;
- irrigation scheduling according to tensiometer readings; and
- irrigation according to the farmers’ experience and knowledge (as they usually do).
2.1. Water Chart
2.2. Tensiometers
2.3. Experimental Setup
2.4. Irrigation and Related Calculations
2.5. Harvest and Post-Harvest Survey
2.6. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Irrigation Water Applications in the Different Treatments
3.1.1. Actual Water Applications vs. Recommendations and Irrigation Requirements
3.1.2. Adherence of Farmers to Irrigation Scheduling Recommendations
3.2. Crop Yields
3.3. Water Productivity
4. Discussion
4.1. Use and Perception of Irrigation Scheduling Tools
4.1.1. Water Chart
4.1.2. Tensiometers
4.2. Determining Irrigation Water Quantity
- (1)
- Farmers need to know how much water should be applied once the threshold soil moisture tension for irrigation of a specific crop is reached; this depends on soil characteristics and can, as mentioned above, be determined through a soil water retention curve [27,28]. Another method to optimize irrigation depth is to monitor soil moisture at bottom of the root zone, i.e., by identifying the moment when the irrigation water front reaches a certain soil depth [29]. This approach may, however, be compromised by the lag time tensiometers have in displaying increased soil moisture.
- (2)
- Farmers have to know how much water they are actually applying (e.g., per unit time). This is not obvious: particularly when irrigating through canals and ditches (gravity systems), it is difficult to estimate water application depth. But also in drip irrigation systems without pressure-compensating emitters (as in our trial) it is challenging to know water application quantities if no water meters are installed: drip systems are often directly connected to pumps which may run at different speed; this can result in different pressure and thus different discharge. Furthermore, certain drip-irrigation systems (as the iDE systems we used in the trial) have valves installed at each lateral. If farmers operate theses valves (e.g., to reduce pressure/discharge or to irrigate as quickly as possible) discharge throughout the entire system is affected. These factors also make it almost impossible to estimate and assess irrigation depth according to irrigation time and discharge; discharge (per time) may just vary too much. Additionally, we have experienced that irrigation durations reported by farmers are inaccurate as many do not have or use watches; considering the short irrigation time required in small-scale vegetable production this may result in considerable misjudgment of water applications and thus in substantial over- or under-irrigation. For investigations on irrigation water use and water productivity such deviations are not tolerable; thus, water applications have to be measured (with water meters) in such situations.
4.3. Over-Irrigation and Possible Causes
4.4. Yields and Water Productivity
4.5. Assessment of the Trial
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Studer, C.; Spoehel, S. Potential and Actual Water Savings through Improved Irrigation Scheduling in Small-Scale Vegetable Production. Agronomy 2019, 9, 888. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy9120888
Studer C, Spoehel S. Potential and Actual Water Savings through Improved Irrigation Scheduling in Small-Scale Vegetable Production. Agronomy. 2019; 9(12):888. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy9120888
Chicago/Turabian StyleStuder, Christoph, and Simon Spoehel. 2019. "Potential and Actual Water Savings through Improved Irrigation Scheduling in Small-Scale Vegetable Production" Agronomy 9, no. 12: 888. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy9120888