Abstract
Rooted cuttings of Rhaphiolepis indica, a low slow-growing evergreen shrub, were grown outdoors in weighing lysi meters to market size in 11.4-L containers. Actual evapo transpiration (ETA) and evaporation from containers shaded with plastic foliage was determined daily. The first 60 days after transplanting, substrate evaporation accounted for most of ETA and was the major component through the first 127 days. ETA generally followed variations in reference evapo transpiration (ETo). Mean cumulative ETA to produce 90% of measured plants to market size was 101 L or 1.99-m depth per plant based on container surface area. Water need indices, similar to crop coefficients, were highly correlated with percent canopy closure using an exponential decay equation (r2 = 0.898), but a more precise estimate at higher canopy closures was achieved using a third-order inverse polynomial equation (r2 = 0.907). When combined with similar previous data from Viburnum odoratissimum and Ligustrum japonicum, the inverse polynomial equation correlation was 0.802 for all three shrubs. This implies the %Closure model provides a good general base for ETA-based irrigation of woody evergreen shrub species based on canopy size and spacing with improved precision when individual equations are derived by species.
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Beeson, R. C. (2012). Development of a simple reference Evapotranspiration model for irrigation of woody ornamentals. HortScience, 47(2), 264–268. https://doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.47.2.264
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