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Cotton irrigation scheduling using remotely sensed and FAO-S6 basal crop coefficients

by D J Hunsaker, E M Barnes, T R Clarke, G J Fitzgerald, P J Pinter
ASAECSAE Annual ()
  • ISSN: 00012351

Abstract

Multispectral vegetation indices calculated from canopy reflectance measurements have been used to simulate real-time basal crop coefficients (K-cb), which have been validated to improve evapotranspiration (ETc) estimation for several crops. In this article, an application of the approach was evaluated for cotton using remote sensing observations of the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) to estimate K-cb as a function of NDVI The dual crop coefficient procedures of FAO Paper 56 (FAO-56) were used to calculate ETc and determine irrigation scheduling using K-cb estimates from remote sensing (NDVI treatment) as well as from time-based K-cb curves (FAO treatment), which were developed locally for standard crop conditions using FAO-56 procedures. Two cotton experiments, conducted in 2002 and 2003 in central Arizona, included sub-treatments of three levels of plant density and two levels of nitrogen management to impose a wide range of crop development and water use. The NDVI-K-cb relationships used for 2002, developed from previous data for a different cotton cultivar, row orientation, and soil type, substantially underestimated ETc, resulting in significantly less irrigation water applied and lower lint yields for NDVI compared to the FAO treatment. The 2002 data were used to recalibrate the NDVI-K-cb relationships; which were then used for the NDVI treatments in 2003. The FAO K-cb curve used in 2002 described ETc and irrigation scheduling reasonably well for sparse plots, but consistently underestimated water use and soil water depletion for the higher plant densities during the first half of the season. Consequently, an adjusted FAO Kcb curve, based on 2002 results, was employed for the FAO treatment in 2003. For the 2003 experiment, estimated cotton ETc for the NDVI treatment resulted in a mean absolute error of 9% compared to 10% for the FAO treatment, where the difference was not significant between treatments. However, the NDVI-K-cb relations used in 2003 greatly improved estimates for ETc compared to the previous year, where the mean absolute error for the NDVI treatment in 2002 was 22%. Predicted ETc using the FAO K-cb curve of 2003 for typical planting density and high nitrogen conditions resulted in a mean absolute error of 10% compared to 15% in 2002. Final lint yields for 2003 were not significantly different between the two Kcb methods. Although additional research is needed to validate remote sensing K-cb estimation for other conditions than those in these experiments, this study did not show significant advantages for the NDVI approach over a carefully derived single FAO K-cb application. However, the NDVI approach has the potential to further extend our present crop coefficient estimation capabilities when weather, plant density, or other factors cause cotton canopy development and water use patterns to depart from typical conditions.

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Cotton irrigation scheduling usin...

The authors are solely responsible for the content of this technical presentation. The technical presentation does not necessarily reflect the official position of ASAE or CSAE, and its printing and distribution does not constitute an endorsement of views which may be expressed. Technical presentations are not subject to the formal peer review process, therefore, they are not to be presented as refereed publications. Citation of this work should state that it is from an ASAE/CSAE meeting paper. EXAMPLE: Author's Last Name, Initials. 2004. Title of Presentation. ASAE/CSAE Meeting Paper No. 04xxxx. St. Joseph, Mich.: ASAE. For information about securing permission to reprint or reproduce a technical presentation, please contact ASAE at hq@asae.org or 269-429-0300 (2950 Niles Road, St. Joseph, MI 49085-9659 USA). An ASAE/CSAE Meeting Presentation Paper Number: 042090 Scheduling Cotton Irrigations Using Remotely-Sensed Basal Crop Coefficients and FAO-56 Douglas J. Hunsaker, ASAE Member Engineer USDA-ARS, US Water Conservation Lab., 4331 E. Broadway Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85040, e- mail: dhunsaker@uswcl.ars.ag.gov. Paul J. Pinter, Jr., Thomas R. Clarke, Glenn J. Fitzgerald, Bruce A. Kimball USDA-ARS, US Water Conservation Lab., 4331 E. Broadway Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85040. Edward M. Barnes Cotton Inc., 6399 Weston Parkway, Cary, NC 27513. Jeffrey C. Silvertooth The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721. James Hagler USDA-ARS, Western Cotton Research Lab., 4135 E. Broadway Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85040. Written for presentation at the 2004 ASAE/CSAE Annual International Meeting Sponsored by ASAE/CSAE Fairmont Chateau Laurier, The Westin, Government Centre Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 1 - 4 August 2004 Abstract. Techniques to more accurately quantify crop evapotranspiration (ETc) are needed for determining crop water needs and appropriate irrigation scheduling. In this study, remotely sensed observations of the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) were used to estimate cotton basal crop coefficients (Kcb), which were then applied within the dual crop coefficient procedures of the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), Paper 56 (FAO-56) to calculate daily ETc. An
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The authors are solely responsible for the content of this technical presentation. The technical presentation does not necessarily reflect the official position of ASAE or CSAE, and its printing and distribution does not constitute an endorsement of views which may be expressed. Technical presentations are not subject to the formal peer review process, therefore, they are not to be presented as refereed publications. Citation of this work should state that it is from an ASAE/CSAE meeting paper. EXAMPLE: Author's Last Name, Initials. 2004. Title of Presentation. ASAE/CSAE Meeting Paper No. 04xxxx. St. Joseph, Mich.: ASAE. For information about securing permission to reprint or reproduce a technical presentation, please contact ASAE at hq@asae.org or 269-429-0300 (2950 Niles Road, St. Joseph, MI 49085-9659 USA). experiment in central Arizona during 2003 compared irrigation scheduling using a remotely sensed Kcb technique (NDVI treatment) with the FAO-56 Kcb curve (FAO treatment). The FAO curve was locally developed for optimum crop conditions and standard cotton density. Final lint yield means were not significantly different between the two irrigation methods, which included sub-treatments of two levels of nitrogen and three plant densities. However, NDVI attained higher yields under low N input, whereas FAO generally had higher yields under high N. The ETc estimated using the NDVI-Kcb method was in closer agreement with measured cumulative ETc than the FAO Kcb. For high N treatments, the mean absolute differences between measured and estimated cumulative ETc during the growing season for typical, dense, and sparse populations (10, 20, and 5 plants m-2, respectively) were 4, 17, and 4 mm, respectively, for NDVI, whereas they were10, 32, and 13 mm, respectively, for FAO. Although additional research is needed for improving our remote sensing technique, it potentially offers an improvement over the FAO Kcb curve for quantifying actual ETc. Keywords. Evapotranspiration, irrigation requirements, soil water content, canopy reflectance, normalized difference vegetation index

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