The efficient use of water is one of the main objectives for the sustainable management of natural resources in agriculture. As well known, water is a fundamental resource for the metabolic activities of crops, but this resource is available in limited quantities and therefore optimizing the use of water in irrigation practice is very important for a sustainable management of it. A possible technological solution based on the integration between geophysical techniques for soil moisture measure and soil water spatial monitoring as time domain reflectometry (TDR), ground penetrating radar (GPR) and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) technique can be used. Of course, with the use of these technologies the opportunity to know the current soil moisture status and how it is distributed in the soil is useful to determine the actual water requirement of a crop, with the result of optimizing the use of water in irrigation practice for a sustainable management of it, considering also the considerable water volumes required for the productive cycle of many crops. The method of Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) for estimating crop water requirements, is based on the calculation of the crop evapotranspiration Etc as the product between the reference evapotranspiration (ET0) and the crop coefficient (Kc); where the evapotranspiration ET0 is defined as the loss of water due to the simultaneous processes of evaporation from the soil surface (E) and transpiration by the vegetation cover (T); while the crop coefficient Kc is a measure of the vegetative development of a specific crop in the various phenological phases (Allen et al., 1998). Sensors for soil moisture estimation, as time domain reflectometry (TDR), can be used for verifying ET model applied in a given environments and for a given crop (Jeffrey 2004, Thompson et al.2007). In addition, the structural complexity of the soil has suggested the implementation of integrated geophysical investigations as Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) and Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) in order to gain information about the soil moisture content. In fact, the integration of ERT and GPR reduces the ambiguity in the data interpretation by means of a suitable integrated survey design and data processing. In particular, the data obtained from these geophysical surveys provides information with very high detail about the soil layers and this allows at monitoring undesired water losses for percolation into the deeper layers. In this way, it is possible to design a proper scheduling of the amount of irrigation water for a particular crop, which is not based on the only information about the estimated evapotranspiration. In some research, geophysical measurements to spatial and temporal monitoring of soil water on irrigated crop were applied (Parchomchuk et al. 1997; Michot et al. 2003; Dahlin et al. 2006; Pardossi et al. 2009; Kelly et al. 2011), and it appears that these geophysical measurements give a contribution on water irrigation management, moreover the measurements with integrated geophysical techniques have the advantage of being noninvasive, rapid and reproducible. A local population of dry bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L) named "fagiolo rosso scritto" has been cultivated at the Experimental Agricultural Farm "Pantano of Pignola" (40°33'31.34"N and 15°45'31.66"E); the farm is a facility of ALSIA (Agency for the Agricultural Development and Innovation of Lucania), Basilicata Region (Italy). Drip irrigation is a common practice worldwide, which compared to furrow or sprinkler irrigation, reduces deep percolation and evaporation and permits a more accurate control of the water within the crop root zone (Simsek et al., 2011).The drip irrigation system was installed after sowing and placed at each row with drippers spaced every 20 cm apart and delivering 2.1 L/h. The drip lines ran along the 25 meters of the rows and were 1.5 meters spaced each other. The present paper illustrates the preliminary results of the integration of geophysical applications on a specific dry bean crop, for monitoring the water content in the soil and its distribution.

Integration of geophysical techniques for sustainable management of water resource in agriculture

Satriani A;Soldovieri F;Loperte A
2014

Abstract

The efficient use of water is one of the main objectives for the sustainable management of natural resources in agriculture. As well known, water is a fundamental resource for the metabolic activities of crops, but this resource is available in limited quantities and therefore optimizing the use of water in irrigation practice is very important for a sustainable management of it. A possible technological solution based on the integration between geophysical techniques for soil moisture measure and soil water spatial monitoring as time domain reflectometry (TDR), ground penetrating radar (GPR) and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) technique can be used. Of course, with the use of these technologies the opportunity to know the current soil moisture status and how it is distributed in the soil is useful to determine the actual water requirement of a crop, with the result of optimizing the use of water in irrigation practice for a sustainable management of it, considering also the considerable water volumes required for the productive cycle of many crops. The method of Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) for estimating crop water requirements, is based on the calculation of the crop evapotranspiration Etc as the product between the reference evapotranspiration (ET0) and the crop coefficient (Kc); where the evapotranspiration ET0 is defined as the loss of water due to the simultaneous processes of evaporation from the soil surface (E) and transpiration by the vegetation cover (T); while the crop coefficient Kc is a measure of the vegetative development of a specific crop in the various phenological phases (Allen et al., 1998). Sensors for soil moisture estimation, as time domain reflectometry (TDR), can be used for verifying ET model applied in a given environments and for a given crop (Jeffrey 2004, Thompson et al.2007). In addition, the structural complexity of the soil has suggested the implementation of integrated geophysical investigations as Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) and Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) in order to gain information about the soil moisture content. In fact, the integration of ERT and GPR reduces the ambiguity in the data interpretation by means of a suitable integrated survey design and data processing. In particular, the data obtained from these geophysical surveys provides information with very high detail about the soil layers and this allows at monitoring undesired water losses for percolation into the deeper layers. In this way, it is possible to design a proper scheduling of the amount of irrigation water for a particular crop, which is not based on the only information about the estimated evapotranspiration. In some research, geophysical measurements to spatial and temporal monitoring of soil water on irrigated crop were applied (Parchomchuk et al. 1997; Michot et al. 2003; Dahlin et al. 2006; Pardossi et al. 2009; Kelly et al. 2011), and it appears that these geophysical measurements give a contribution on water irrigation management, moreover the measurements with integrated geophysical techniques have the advantage of being noninvasive, rapid and reproducible. A local population of dry bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L) named "fagiolo rosso scritto" has been cultivated at the Experimental Agricultural Farm "Pantano of Pignola" (40°33'31.34"N and 15°45'31.66"E); the farm is a facility of ALSIA (Agency for the Agricultural Development and Innovation of Lucania), Basilicata Region (Italy). Drip irrigation is a common practice worldwide, which compared to furrow or sprinkler irrigation, reduces deep percolation and evaporation and permits a more accurate control of the water within the crop root zone (Simsek et al., 2011).The drip irrigation system was installed after sowing and placed at each row with drippers spaced every 20 cm apart and delivering 2.1 L/h. The drip lines ran along the 25 meters of the rows and were 1.5 meters spaced each other. The present paper illustrates the preliminary results of the integration of geophysical applications on a specific dry bean crop, for monitoring the water content in the soil and its distribution.
2014
978-88-940442-3-2
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/280177
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