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Keywords = micro-irrigation systems

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22 pages, 4578 KB  
Article
Effects of Plastic Film and Gravel-Sand Mulching on Soil Moisture and Yield of Wolfberry Under Ridge-Furrow Planting in an Arid Desert Region of China’s Loess Plateau
by Xiaojuan Ma, Zhi Wang, Bo Ma, Luyao Zhang, Juncang Tian and Jinyu He
Agronomy 2025, 15(10), 2312; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15102312 - 30 Sep 2025
Abstract
In arid areas, the combined use of plastic sheeting under gravel-sand mulch on ridge-furrow planting systems is an emerging practice to minimize soil water evaporation and micro-plastic pollution. In this study, we conducted a two-year field experiment near Gobi-Tengger Desert in Ningxia, China, [...] Read more.
In arid areas, the combined use of plastic sheeting under gravel-sand mulch on ridge-furrow planting systems is an emerging practice to minimize soil water evaporation and micro-plastic pollution. In this study, we conducted a two-year field experiment near Gobi-Tengger Desert in Ningxia, China, to evaluate the effects of a plastic film underneath a layer of pure sand (MS1), pure gravel (MS2) and mixed gravel-and-sand (MS3) mulch on the soil hydrothermal properties, water use efficiency, yield, and fruit quality of wolfberry, compared to bare soil (CK). The results showed that mulching significantly increased soil temperature and water content in the 0–20 cm surface layer, though the effects varied with soil depth and water availability between a supplemental irrigated year (2022) and a rain-fed year (2023). Mulching markedly altered soil water dynamics, enhancing the capture and retention of light-to-heavy rainfall events. Consequently, all mulches significantly increased seasonal water consumption (ET) and water use efficiency (WUE) compared to CK. The MS1 treatment consistently achieved the highest yield and WUE, and the highest accumulation of beneficial fruit compounds like polysaccharides and flavonoids. However, this treatment also resulted in elevated soil salinity. Our findings demonstrate that combined mulching, especially MS1, is a highly effective strategy for optimizing soil conditions, water productivity, and fruit quality in wolfberry cultivation, although long-term salinity management requires attention. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agroecology Innovation: Achieving System Resilience)
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25 pages, 4073 KB  
Article
Evaluating Country-Scale Irrigation Demand Through Parsimonious Agro-Hydrological Modeling
by Nike Chiesa Turiano, Marta Tuninetti, Francesco Laio and Luca Ridolfi
Hydrology 2025, 12(9), 240; https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrology12090240 - 18 Sep 2025
Viewed by 225
Abstract
Climate change is expected to reduce water availability during cropping season, while growing populations and rising living standards will increase the global water demand. This creates an urgent need for national water management tools to optimize water allocation. In particular, agriculture requires targeted [...] Read more.
Climate change is expected to reduce water availability during cropping season, while growing populations and rising living standards will increase the global water demand. This creates an urgent need for national water management tools to optimize water allocation. In particular, agriculture requires targeted approaches to improve efficiency. Alongside field measurements and remote sensing, agro-hydrological models have emerged as a particularly valuable resource for assessing and managing agricultural water demand. This study introduces WaterCROPv2, a state-of-the-art agro-hydrological model designed to estimate national-scale irrigation water demand while effectively balancing accuracy with practical data requirements. WaterCROPv2 incorporates innovative features such as hourly time-step computations, advanced rainwater canopy interception modeling, detailed soil-dependent leakage dynamics, and localized daily evapotranspiration patterns based on meteorological data. Through comprehensive analyses, WaterCROPv2 demonstrates significantly enhanced reliability in estimating irrigation water needs across various climatic regions, particularly under contrasting dry and wet conditions. Validation against independent data from the Italian National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT) for maize cultivation in Italy in 2010 confirms the model’s accuracy and underscores its potential for broader international applications. A spatial analysis further reveals that the estimation errors align closely with regional precipitation patterns: the model tends to slightly underestimate irrigation needs in the wetter northern regions, whereas it somewhat overestimates demand in the drier southern areas. WaterCROPv2 has also been used to analyze irrigation water requirements for maize cultivation in Italy from 2005 to 2015, highlighting its significant potential as a strategic decision-support tool. The model identifies optimal cultivation areas, such as the Pianura Padana, where the irrigation requirements do not exceed 200 mm for the entire maize growing period, and unsuitable regions, such as Salentino, where over 500 mm per season are required due to the local climatic conditions. In addition, estimates of the water volumes required for the current extent of maize cultivation show that the Pianura Padana region demands nearly three times the amount of water used in the Salentino area. The model has also been used to identify regions where adopting efficient irrigation technologies could lead to substantial water savings. With micro-irrigation currently covering less than 18% of irrigated land, simulations suggest that a complete transition to this system could reduce the national water demand by 21%. Savings could reach 30–40% in traditionally water-rich regions that rely on inefficient irrigation practices but are expected to be increasingly exposed to temperature increases and precipitation shifts. The analysis shows that those regions currently lacking adequate irrigation infrastructure stand to gain the most from targeted irrigation system investments but also highlights how incentives where micro-irrigation is already widespread can provide further 5–10% savings. Full article
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26 pages, 4529 KB  
Article
AgriMicro—A Microservices-Based Platform for Optimization of Farm Decisions
by Cătălin Negulescu, Theodor Borangiu, Silviu Răileanu and Victor Valentin Anghel
AgriEngineering 2025, 7(9), 299; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriengineering7090299 - 16 Sep 2025
Viewed by 425
Abstract
The paper presents AgriMicro, a modern Farm Management Information System (FMIS) designed to help farmers monitor and optimize corn crops from sowing to harvest, by leveraging cloud technologies and machine learning algorithms. The platform is built on a modular architecture composed of multiple [...] Read more.
The paper presents AgriMicro, a modern Farm Management Information System (FMIS) designed to help farmers monitor and optimize corn crops from sowing to harvest, by leveraging cloud technologies and machine learning algorithms. The platform is built on a modular architecture composed of multiple components implemented through microservices such as the weather and soil service, recommendation and alert engine, field service, and crop service—which continuously communicate to centralize field data and provide real-time insights. Through the ongoing exchange of data between these services, different information pieces about soil conditions, crop health, and agricultural operations are processed and analyzed, resulting in predictions of crop evolution and practical recommendations for future interventions (e.g., fertilization or irrigation). This integrated FMIS transforms collected data into concrete actions, supporting farmers and agricultural consultants in making informed decisions, improving field productivity, and ensuring more efficient resource use. Its microservice-based architecture provides scalability, modularity, and straightforward integration with other information systems. The objectives of this study are threefold. First, to specify and design a modular FMIS architecture based on microservices and cloud computing, ensuring scalability, interoperability and adaptability to different farm contexts. Second, to prototype and integrate initial components and Internet of Things (IoT)-based data collection with machine learning models, specifically Random Forest and XGBoost, to provide maize yield forecasting as a proof of concept. Model performance was evaluated using standard predictive accuracy metrics, including the coefficient of determination (R2) and the root mean square error (RMSE), confirming the reliability of the forecasting pipeline and validated against official harvest data (average maize yield) from the Romanian National Institute of Statistics (INS) for 2024. These results confirm the reliability of the forecasting pipeline under controlled conditions; however, in real-world practice, broader regional and inter-annual variability typically results in considerably higher errors, often on the order of 10–20%. Third, to present a Romania based case study which illustrates the end-to-end workflow and outlines an implementation roadmap toward full deployment. As this is a design-oriented study currently under development, several services remain at the planning or early prototyping stage, and comprehensive system level benchmarks are deferred to future work. Full article
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15 pages, 3131 KB  
Article
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Water-Saving Irrigation on Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) Production in China: A Meta-Analytical Approach
by Jiayu Ma, Baozhong Yin, Cuijiao Jing, Wanyi Li, Yilan Qiao, Luyao Zhang, Haotian Fan, Limin Gu and Wenchao Zhen
Plants 2025, 14(18), 2837; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14182837 - 11 Sep 2025
Viewed by 373
Abstract
Optimized water-saving irrigation (WSI) practices are critical for enhancing resource use efficiency and ensuring sustainable wheat production in water-scarce regions. This meta-analysis quantitatively assessed the effects of various WSI methods on wheat yield, water use efficiency (WUE), and partial factor productivity of nitrogen [...] Read more.
Optimized water-saving irrigation (WSI) practices are critical for enhancing resource use efficiency and ensuring sustainable wheat production in water-scarce regions. This meta-analysis quantitatively assessed the effects of various WSI methods on wheat yield, water use efficiency (WUE), and partial factor productivity of nitrogen (PFPN) across China’s wheat regions. The results showed that optimized irrigation, particularly drip and micro-sprinkler systems, significantly reduced irrigation water and nitrogen inputs by 35.1% and 7.2%, respectively, without yield penalties. Drip and micro-sprinkler irrigation, which together accounted for over 97% of observations, improved WUE by 18.7% and 10.1%, respectively, and increased PFPN by 6.8% and 5.5%, highlighting their dominant role in current WSI practices. Moderate deficit irrigation (60–100% of full irrigation) optimized WUE and PFPN while maintaining stable yields, whereas severe deficit irrigation (<40%) caused substantial yield losses. Soil texture and bulk density strongly modulated WSI effectiveness. Climatic factors, particularly growing season precipitation, negatively correlated with WSI benefits, highlighting enhanced efficiency gains under drier conditions. These findings emphasize the need to prioritize drip and micro-sprinkler irrigation in national water-saving strategies and advocate for integrated approaches combining WSI with soil health management and site-specific irrigation scheduling to promote sustainable wheat intensification under variable agroecological conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Water and Nitrogen Management in the Soil–Crop System (3rd Edition))
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26 pages, 9137 KB  
Article
Synergistic Effects of Sediment Size and Concentration on Performance Degradation in Centrifugal Irrigation Pumps: A Southern Xinjiang Case Study
by Rui Xu, Shunjun Hong, Zihai Yang, Xiaozhou Hu, Yang Jiang, Yuqi Han, Chungong Gao and Xingpeng Wang
Agriculture 2025, 15(17), 1843; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15171843 - 29 Aug 2025
Viewed by 515
Abstract
Centrifugal irrigation pumps in Southern Xinjiang face severe performance degradation due to high fine-sediment loads in canal water. This study combines Eulerian multiphase simulations with experimental validation to investigate the coupled effects of sediment size (0.05~0.8 mm) and concentration (5~20%) on hydraulic performance. [...] Read more.
Centrifugal irrigation pumps in Southern Xinjiang face severe performance degradation due to high fine-sediment loads in canal water. This study combines Eulerian multiphase simulations with experimental validation to investigate the coupled effects of sediment size (0.05~0.8 mm) and concentration (5~20%) on hydraulic performance. Numerical models incorporating Realizable kε turbulence closure and discrete phase tracking reveal two critical thresholds: (1) particle sizes ≥ 0.4 mm trigger a phase transition from localized disturbance to global flow disorder, expanding low-pressure zones by 37% at equivalent concentrations; (2) concentrations exceeding 13% accelerate nonlinear pressure decay through collective particle interactions. Velocity field analysis demonstrates size-dependent attenuation mechanisms: fine sediments (≤0.2 mm) cause gradual dissipation via micro-scale drag, while coarse sediments (≥0.6 mm) induce “cliff-like” velocity drops through inertial impact-blockade chains. Experimental wear tests confirm simulation accuracy in predicting erosion hotspots at impeller inlets/outlets. The identified synergistic thresholds provide critical guidelines for anti-wear design in sediment-laden irrigation systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Technology)
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23 pages, 1540 KB  
Article
Assessment of Evapotranspiration–Yield Relationships in Northern China Tea Plantations: A Basis for Crop Water Productivity Improvement
by Quanru Liu, Zongzhi Wang, Liang Cheng, Kun Wang, Ying Bai, Qi Ding, Ziyue Shao and Yongbing Zhang
Agronomy 2025, 15(8), 1955; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15081955 - 13 Aug 2025
Viewed by 677
Abstract
Global climate warming and freshwater scarcity are intensifying water stress in agricultural fields, severely constraining sustainable agricultural development. As a typical C3 perennial cash crop, tea (Camellia sinensis) is naturally suited to low-latitude regions with abundant heat and evenly distributed precipitation, [...] Read more.
Global climate warming and freshwater scarcity are intensifying water stress in agricultural fields, severely constraining sustainable agricultural development. As a typical C3 perennial cash crop, tea (Camellia sinensis) is naturally suited to low-latitude regions with abundant heat and evenly distributed precipitation, and it is highly sensitive to environmental factors such as temperature and moisture. In northern hilly tea-producing areas, tea plantations often encounter multiple challenges including uneven rainfall distribution and poor soil water retention, resulting in prominent water supply–demand imbalances that critically limit stable and efficient tea production. To explore efficient water-saving irrigation strategies adapted to such ecological conditions, this study was conducted in the Yushan Tea Plantation, Rizhao City, Shandong Province, China. Based on field monitoring data across three growing seasons (spring, summer, and autumn) from 2021 to 2023, five irrigation treatments were evaluated: conventional sprinkler irrigation (CK), drip irrigation (D), micro-sprinkler irrigation (W), drip irrigation with straw mulching (SD), and micro-sprinkler irrigation with straw mulching (SW). Actual crop evapotranspiration (ETc act) was estimated using the soil water balance method, and actual fresh tea leaf yield (FTLY) and crop water productivity (CWP) were measured. Results showed that the SW treatment significantly improved both FTLY and CWP across all three seasons, with summer FTLY in 2022 increasing by 56.58% compared to CK and maximum CWP in spring and autumn reaching 0.916 kg/m3, demonstrating excellent stability and adaptability. Among all irrigation strategies, the SW treatment also exhibited the best regression fitting and yield prediction accuracy. The regression model validated by leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV) for the SW treatment demonstrated strong robustness and reliability (R2 = 0.734; RMSE = 208.12 kg/ha; MAE = 183.31 kg/ha). Notably, the samples with the largest prediction errors across all treatments were nearly all associated with the highest or near-highest ETc act values, indicating that model accuracy tends to decrease under extreme evapotranspiration conditions. The results show the synergistic effect of irrigation–mulching integration on enhancing CWP in northern perennial tea systems, providing empirical evidence and theoretical support for developing efficient irrigation strategies in hilly tea-growing regions of Northern China. Full article
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27 pages, 1706 KB  
Review
Micro- and Nanoplastics as Emerging Threats to Both Terrestrial and Aquatic Animals: A Comprehensive Review
by Munwar Ali, Chang Xu and Kun Li
Vet. Sci. 2025, 12(8), 688; https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci12080688 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1298
Abstract
Micro- and Nanoplastic (MNP) pollution is an emerging challenge globally, posing a significant threat to both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. This review critically examines the sources, exposure routes, and impact of plastics, with particular focus on implications for the livestock sector. MNPs [...] Read more.
Micro- and Nanoplastic (MNP) pollution is an emerging challenge globally, posing a significant threat to both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. This review critically examines the sources, exposure routes, and impact of plastics, with particular focus on implications for the livestock sector. MNPs enter animals’ bodies primarily through ingestion of contaminated feed and water, inhalation, and dermal exposure, subsequently accumulating in various organs, disrupting physiological functions. Notably, MNPs facilitate the horizontal transfer of antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs), exacerbating the global challenge of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). In agricultural environments, sources such as organic fertilizers, wastewater irrigation systems, surface runoff, and littering contribute to soil contamination, adversely affecting plant growth and soil health, which in turn compromises feed quality and ultimately animals’ productivity. This review synthesizes current evidence demonstrating how MNP exposure impairs animal production, reproduction, and survival, and highlights the interconnected risks to food safety and ecosystem health. The findings call for the urgent need for comprehensive research under controlled conditions to underscore the fine details regarding mechanisms of MNP toxicity and to inform effective mitigation strategies. Addressing MNP pollution is crucial for safeguarding animal health, ensuring sustainable livestock production, and promoting environmental sustainability and integrity. Full article
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22 pages, 4050 KB  
Review
A Review of Pressure Regulation Technologies for Irrigation Pipeline Systems
by Fan Yang, Hong Li and Yue Jiang
Agriculture 2025, 15(14), 1528; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15141528 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 733
Abstract
This review examines water pressure regulation technologies in irrigation systems tailored for hilly and mountainous terrains. In such areas, effective water management is crucial due to the terrain’s complexity and variability, which can greatly affect water distribution and resource efficiency. This text analyzes [...] Read more.
This review examines water pressure regulation technologies in irrigation systems tailored for hilly and mountainous terrains. In such areas, effective water management is crucial due to the terrain’s complexity and variability, which can greatly affect water distribution and resource efficiency. This text analyzes various types of pressure-regulating devices, including direct-acting and pilot-operated regulators, delving into their working principles, performance characteristics, and practical advantages and disadvantages. This summary also addresses the current research trends in these technologies, focusing on design optimization and performance enhancements. By summarizing existing studies and highlighting areas for future research, this review aims to provide a solid foundation for technological advancements in agricultural irrigation systems suited to challenging landscapes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Water Management)
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28 pages, 4089 KB  
Article
Remote Sensing Identification of Major Crops and Trade-Off of Water and Land Utilization of Oasis in Altay Prefecture
by Gaowei Yan, Luguang Jiang and Ye Liu
Land 2025, 14(7), 1426; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14071426 - 7 Jul 2025
Viewed by 583
Abstract
The Altay oasis, located at the heart of the transnational ecological conservation zone shared by China, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Mongolia, is a region with tremendous potential for water resource utilization. However, with the continued expansion of agriculture, its ecological vulnerability has become increasingly [...] Read more.
The Altay oasis, located at the heart of the transnational ecological conservation zone shared by China, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Mongolia, is a region with tremendous potential for water resource utilization. However, with the continued expansion of agriculture, its ecological vulnerability has become increasingly pronounced. Within this fragile balance lies a critical opportunity: efficient water resource management could pave the way for sustainable development across the entire arid oasis regions. This study uses a decision tree model based on a feature threshold to map the spatial distribution of major crops in the Altay Prefecture oasis, assess their water requirements, and identify the coupling relationships between agricultural water and land resources. Furthermore, it proposed optimization planting structure strategies under three scenarios: water-saving irrigation, cash crop orientation, and forage crop orientation. In 2023, the total planting area of major crops in Altay Prefecture was 3368 km2, including spring wheat, spring maize, sunflower, and alfalfa, which consumed 2.68 × 109 m3 of water. Although this area accounted for only 2.85% of the land, it consumed 26.23% of regional water resources, with agricultural water use comprising as much as 82.5% of total consumption, highlighting inefficient agricultural water use as a critical barrier to sustainable agricultural development. Micro-irrigation technologies demonstrate significant water-saving potential. The adoption of such technologies could reduce water consumption by 14.5%, thereby significantly enhancing agricultural water-use efficiency. Cropping structure optimization analysis indicates that sunflower-based planting patterns offer notable water-saving benefits. Increasing the area of sunflower cultivation by one unit can unlock a water-saving potential of 25.91%. Forage crop combinations excluding soybean can increase livestock production by 30.2% under the same level of water consumption, demonstrating their superior effectiveness for livestock system expansion. This study provides valuable insights for achieving sustainable agricultural development in arid regions under different development scenarios. Full article
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20 pages, 3605 KB  
Article
Effect of Film-Mulching on Soil Evaporation and Plant Transpiration in a Soybean Field in Arid Northwest China
by Danni Yang, Chunyu Wang, Zhenyu Guo, Sien Li, Yingying Sun, Xiandong Hou and Zhenhua Wang
Agronomy 2025, 15(5), 1089; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15051089 - 29 Apr 2025
Viewed by 755
Abstract
Drip irrigation technology, known for its advantages in high water use efficiency and yield increase, has been a focal point of research regarding its combined effects with the plastic film-mulching technique on field water consumption and crop growth. To accurately quantify the water-saving [...] Read more.
Drip irrigation technology, known for its advantages in high water use efficiency and yield increase, has been a focal point of research regarding its combined effects with the plastic film-mulching technique on field water consumption and crop growth. To accurately quantify the water-saving effect of plastic film-mulching techniques and investigate the mechanisms of mulching on evaporation (E) and transpiration (T), this study was conducted on soybean using the Bowen ratio–energy balance system and micro-lysimeters as the observation means and the MSW model as the data partitioning tool, during 2019–2021 in arid northwest China. We compared evapotranspiration (ET) under the film-mulched drip irrigation (FM) and non-mulched drip irrigation (NM) treatments. The results show that ET, E, and T under FM were reduced by 32.6 mm, 76.1 mm, and −43.5 mm, respectively. Moreover, mulching increased the leaf area index (LAI) by 20.7%, soybean yield from 2727.0 kg ha−1 to 3250.5 kg ha−1, and WUE from 0.64 kg m−3 to 0.83 kg m−3 on average, which means mulching reduced water consumption in the field by decreasing soil evaporation and improved water use efficiency by promoting crop growth. Further analysis indicated that mulching has strengthened the connection between soil temperature and humidity and weakened the effect of soil temperature on soybean leaf growth. Soil water content (SWC) and LAI had a direct negative effect on E, with LAI causing a stronger effect on E under the FM treatment. Mulching has weakened the direct effect of SWC on T, so that only LAI and soil temperature had a significant direct positive effect on T. Following the rapid growth of soybean LAI, the isolating effect of the mulch was gradually replaced by the dense leaf canopy. The results provide a reference for further exploring the water-saving and yield-increasing benefits of plastic film-mulching techniques, and to facilitate wider promotion of the plastic film-mulching techniques and the water–fertilizer integration technology in arid regions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Water Use and Irrigation)
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17 pages, 2039 KB  
Article
Simulating Water Application Efficiency in Pressurized Irrigation Systems: A Computational Approach
by Nelson Carriço, Diogo Felícissimo, André Antunes and Paulo Brito da Luz
Water 2025, 17(8), 1217; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17081217 - 18 Apr 2025
Viewed by 1294
Abstract
The agricultural sector faces growing environmental and societal pressures to balance natural resource use with food security, particularly within the Water-Energy-Food-Ecosystems Nexus (WEFE). Increasing water demand, competition, and challenges like droughts and desertification are driving the need for innovative irrigation practices. Pressurized irrigation [...] Read more.
The agricultural sector faces growing environmental and societal pressures to balance natural resource use with food security, particularly within the Water-Energy-Food-Ecosystems Nexus (WEFE). Increasing water demand, competition, and challenges like droughts and desertification are driving the need for innovative irrigation practices. Pressurized irrigation systems, such as sprinkler and micro-irrigation, are gaining prominence due to their automation, labor savings, and increased water application efficiency. To support farmers in designing and managing these systems, the R&D project AGIR developed a computational tool that simulates water application efficiency under site-specific conditions. The tool integrates key parameters, including system design, scheduling, soil properties, topography, meteorological data, and vegetation cover, providing a robust methodological framework with classification criteria for evaluating irrigation options. Validated using data from six case studies, the tool achieved simulated irrigation efficiencies of 73% to 90%, which are consistent with field observations. By simplifying complex irrigation requirement calculations, the model offers a user-friendly alternative while maintaining accuracy at the farm level. This innovative tool enables stakeholders to optimize irrigation systems, reduce water losses, and establish standardized recommendations for design, management, performance, and socio-economic considerations. It represents a significant step forward in supporting sustainable water management and advancing the goals of Agriculture 4.0. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Methods and Tools for Sustainable Agricultural Water Management)
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13 pages, 1492 KB  
Article
Effects of Nitrogen Fertilizer Spraying Time on Source–Sink Nitrogen Metabolism and Seed Oil Quality of Paeonia ostii ‘Fengdan’
by Nannan Zhang, Xingqiao Liu, Xiaolei Ma, Yabing Zhang, Duoduo Wang, Dingding Zuo, Chengwei Song and Xiaogai Hou
Agronomy 2025, 15(4), 892; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15040892 - 3 Apr 2025
Viewed by 689
Abstract
The spraying time of nitrogen fertilizer is a key factor to consider when fertilizing with an intelligent micro-sprinkler irrigation system. This study aims to investigate the impact of nitrogen fertilizer spraying time on the seed oil quality of tree peony, with the expectation [...] Read more.
The spraying time of nitrogen fertilizer is a key factor to consider when fertilizing with an intelligent micro-sprinkler irrigation system. This study aims to investigate the impact of nitrogen fertilizer spraying time on the seed oil quality of tree peony, with the expectation of providing theoretical support for the application of intelligent micro-sprinkler irrigation systems in the production of tree peony. In 2022 and 2023, foliar nitrogen application was conducted on Paeonia ostii ‘Fengdan’ utilizing an intelligent micro-spray irrigation system, with four distinct nitrogen fertilizer spraying times (3:00–4:00, 7:00–8:00, 14:00–15:00, and 19:00–20:00). Based on this, the study assessed nitrogen metabolism indicators in leaves and seeds at various growth stages and the fatty acid composition of seed oil in Paeonia ostii ‘Fengdan’. The results revealed that foliar nitrogen application between 14:00 and 15:00 significantly enhanced the levels of free amino acids (FAA), nitrate reductase (NR), glutamine synthetase (GS), and glutamate synthase (GOGAT) activity in both leaves and seeds. Furthermore, the ratio of α-linolenic acid in the seed oil was significantly increased. Correlation analysis demonstrated a positive or highly significant positive correlation between the levels of nitrogen metabolism indicators and the ratio of unsaturated fatty acids. In conclusion, foliar nitrogen application between 14:00 and 15:00 significantly enhances the FAA content and the activity of nitrogen metabolism enzymes within the leaves and seeds and promotes the synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids in seed oil. This study contributes to the efficient and high-quality cultivation of tree peony. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Soil and Plant Nutrition)
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23 pages, 5456 KB  
Article
Effects of Water–Fertilizer–Gas Coupling on Emitter Clogging and Uniformity of Drip Irrigation System
by Peng Li, Xinkun Wang, Chenjun Zhang, Keyue Chen, Abdul Rahim Junejo, Jinrui Liu and Hao Li
Horticulturae 2025, 11(3), 333; https://doi.org/10.3390/horticulturae11030333 - 19 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 815
Abstract
The drip emitter is a fundamental component of the drip irrigation system, and its performance directly influences the efficiency of water–fertilizer–gas (WFG) coupling irrigation. However, the precise mechanism through which WFG coupling affects emitter clogging and system uniformity remains unclear. To address this, [...] Read more.
The drip emitter is a fundamental component of the drip irrigation system, and its performance directly influences the efficiency of water–fertilizer–gas (WFG) coupling irrigation. However, the precise mechanism through which WFG coupling affects emitter clogging and system uniformity remains unclear. To address this, this study conducted a hydraulic performance test of the drip irrigation system based on micro-nano aerated drip irrigation technology. The clogging patterns of emitters and system uniformity were compared and analyzed under non-aerated drip irrigation and WFG coupling drip irrigation conditions. The results indicate that WFG coupling significantly alters the micromorphological structure and microbial diversity of clogged emitters. This change reduces clogging and can delay the clogging process of different types of emitters, thereby extending their service life by up to 29%. Additionally, it effectively improves the uniformity of the drip irrigation system. These findings highlight the potential of WFG coupling as an effective strategy to mitigate emitter clogging and optimize drip irrigation system performance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Irrigation and Water Management Strategies for Horticultural Systems)
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28 pages, 3261 KB  
Article
Green Manure-Based Nitrogen Management in Rice and Zero Tillage in Succeeding Toria and Sweet Corn Sustain System Yield and Soil Quality in Eastern India
by Stuti Debapriya Behera, Lalita Mohan Garnayak, Sukanta Kumar Sarangi, Basudev Behera, Biswaranjan Behera, Jagadish Jena, Satyabrata Mangaraj, Swosti D. Behera, Subrat K. Mahapatra and Sanat K. Dwibedi
Agronomy 2025, 15(2), 475; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15020475 - 16 Feb 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1711
Abstract
Rice-based cropping systems are the predominant sources of livelihood for farmers in South Asia, where soil quality decline is a major concern. An experiment was conducted at Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India, in 2018–2019 and 2019–2020. It comprised two rice cultivars, ‘Manaswini’ (M) and ‘Hasanta’ [...] Read more.
Rice-based cropping systems are the predominant sources of livelihood for farmers in South Asia, where soil quality decline is a major concern. An experiment was conducted at Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India, in 2018–2019 and 2019–2020. It comprised two rice cultivars, ‘Manaswini’ (M) and ‘Hasanta’ (H), and three nitrogen management practices—100% soil test-based nitrogen (STN) (N100), 75% STN + in situ green manuring (Sesbania) (N75+GM), and 50% STN + green manuring (N50+GM)—in the main plot. Meanwhile, sub-plots consisted of three tillage methods for succeeding toria–sweet corn, namely zero tillage (ZT), conventional tillage (CT), and a furrow-irrigated raised bed (FIRB). The experiment was laid out in a split plot design with four replications to assess system nutrient uptake, productivity, and soil quality. Both rice cultivars were equal in terms of system nutrient uptake. The N75+GM practice recorded the highest system NPK uptake (304.1, 70.34, and 343.5 kg ha−1, respectively), enhancing the system N uptake by 10.7 and 7.4%, P uptake by 18.8 and 12.2%, and K uptake by 9.8 and 9.6% over N100 and N50+GM, respectively. ZT recorded the highest system NPK uptake (299.9, 70.6, and 339.7 kg ha−1, respectively). The most promising treatments, M+(N75+GM)-ZT and H+(N75+GM)-ZT, recorded the maximum system economic yield (10.72 and 10.64 t ha−1), residue yield (22.36 and 21.98 t ha−1), biological yield (33.07 and 32.63 t ha−1), and relative soil quality index (0.84 and 0.91). Correlation and principal component analyses exhibited positive and close relationships between all biological yield and soil quality parameters, except for micro water-stable aggregates, the fungal population, and the bulk density. The application of N75+GM in M or H rice and ZT in succeeding toria–sweet corn can sustain productivity and soil quality in Eastern India. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Soil and Plant Nutrition)
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13 pages, 2923 KB  
Article
Retrievability of Fractured Abutment Screws and Damage to Implant–Abutment Connections: An In Vitro Comparative Analysis of Conventional vs. Drilling Techniques
by Paloma Martínez-Alcaraz, Javier Flores-Fraile, Rubén Agustín-Panadero, Gisela Senent-Vicente, Cristina Gómez-Polo, Silvia de la Cruz-Jiménez, Álvaro Zubizarreta-Macho and Ana Belén Lobo Galindo
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(24), 11846; https://doi.org/10.3390/app142411846 - 18 Dec 2024
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Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the retrievability and potential damage to implant–abutment connections caused by fractured abutment screw removal using conventional and drilling techniques. A total of forty abutment screws were randomly inserted into forty dental implants, and then they were fractured and [...] Read more.
This study aimed to evaluate the retrievability and potential damage to implant–abutment connections caused by fractured abutment screw removal using conventional and drilling techniques. A total of forty abutment screws were randomly inserted into forty dental implants, and then they were fractured and extracted using different removal methods: Group A employed a conventional approach utilizing an exploration probe and an ultrasonic device without irrigation (n = 10) (conventional); Group B used the Phibo drilling removal system without irrigation (n = 10) (Phibo); Group C utilized the Rhein83® drilling removal system without irrigation (n = 10) (Rhein83); and Group D implemented the Sanhigia® drilling removal system without irrigation (n = 10) (Sanhigia). Pre- and postoperative micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) scans were performed on the dental implants, and Standard Tessellation Language (STL) digital files were generated for morphometric analysis to measure the wear volume. ANOVA was used to assess the volumetric differences (mm3) and percentage ratios of the internal thread volumes of the implant–abutment connections before and after the procedures. Results: This study found no statistically significant differences in the volumetric and percentage ratios of internal threads among the implant groups (Phibo, Rhein83, Sanhigia, and conventional). However, the success rate for retrieving fractured abutment screws was higher (90%) with the drilling systems compared to the conventional technique (50%). These results suggest that drilling systems are more effective for the retrieval of damaged screws. Although drilling techniques without irrigation demonstrated higher removal efficiency compared to the conventional method, both approaches resulted in similar wear volumes at the implant–abutment connections when used to extract fractured screws. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Applied Dentistry and Oral Sciences)
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