Long-term monitoring of deficit irrigation regimes on citrus orchards in Sicily

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Abstract

The study aims to identify the responses of citrus orchards (C. sinensis (L.) Osbeck), grown under typical Mediterranean climatic conditions, to deficit irrigation (DI) regimes applied over more than a decade (2010-2020). In particular, the DI regimes were declined at the study site in terms of sustained deficit irrigation, regulated deficit irrigation, partial drying of the root-zone, with increasing severity of the water deficit, from 25% to 50% of the crop evapotranspiration, using surface and sub-surface micro-irri-gation techniques. Long-term monitoring was set up for identify-ing the main processes acting at the soil-plant-atmosphere continuum (SPAC) level through direct in situ measurements of mass and energy fluxes (i.e., via micrometeorological technique) and the estimation of ETc and transpiration fluxes (i.e., via sap flow method), and the soil-plant-water processes (via geoelectrical techniques). In addition, the main physiological, qualitative, and quantitative parameters were evaluated since the beginning of the experiment. The results of the long-term experiment demonstrated the great adaptability of the crop species to sustain even the high-est water reductions without substantial alterations of the main marketable productive and qualitative characteristics, evidencing the importance of controlling the SPAC dynamics for correctly applying the water restriction regimes.

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Vanella, D., Ferlito, F., Torrisi, B., Giuffrida, A., Pappalardo, S., Saitta, D., … Consoli, S. (2021). Long-term monitoring of deficit irrigation regimes on citrus orchards in Sicily. Journal of Agricultural Engineering, 52(4). https://doi.org/10.4081/JAE.2021.1193

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