Abstract

In this study, we aim to develop an inexpensive site-specific irrigation advisory service for resolving disadvantages related to using immobile soil moisture sensors and to the differences in irrigation needs of different tea plantations affected by variabilities in cultivars, plant ages, soil heterogeneity, and management practices. In the paper, we present methodologies to retrieve two biophysical variables, surface soil water content and canopy water content of tea trees from Sentinel-2 (S2) (European Space Agency, Paris, France) images and consider their association with crop water availability status to be used for making decisions to send an alert level. Precipitation records are used as auxiliary information to assist in determining or modifying the alert level. Once the site-specific alert level for each target plantation is determined, it is sent to the corresponding farmer through text messaging. All the processes that make up the service, from downloading an S2 image from the web to alert level text messaging, are automated and can be completed before 7:30 a.m. the next day after an S2 image was taken. Therefore, the service is operated cyclically, and corresponds to the five-day revisit period of S2, but one day behind the S2 image acquisition date. However, it should be noted that the amount of irrigation water required for each site-specific plantation has not yet been estimated because of the complexities involved. Instead, a single irrigation rate (300 t ha−1) per irrigation event is recommended. The service is now available to over 20 tea plantations in the Mingjian Township, the largest tea producing region in Taiwan, free of charge since September 2020. This operational application is expected to save expenditures on buying irrigation water and induce deeper root systems by decreasing the frequency of insufficient irrigation commonly employed by local farmers.

Highlights

  • Taiwan is an island about 400 km long and 150 km wide, located at the southeast edge of the Asia continent

  • Frequent irrigation tends to induce roots to remain at the surface soil layer, which can be detrimental to tea trees when environmental stresses occur, such as drought, flood, and cold

  • We describe the development of an inexpensive irrigation advisory service for site-specific tea plantations, which can help farmers to make irrigation decisions

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Summary

Introduction

Taiwan is an island about 400 km long and 150 km wide, located at the southeast edge of the Asia continent. Uneven rainfall distribution among seasons, short but rapid flow rivers, and sedimentations at main reservoirs make Taiwan a water-starved island, it receives an average annual rainfall of 2500 mm [1]. Water use efficiency and saving are the keys to balance competitions between agricultural and industrial sectors and contribute to social justice [2]. There are still no irrigation advisory services in Taiwan to help local farmers to increase water use efficiency, for upland crops. The impact of climate change on the agricultural sector due to changing temperature and rainfall patterns further highlights the need for modern technologies to improve water use efficiency so that the already scarce freshwater resource can be applied more precisely and effectively [3]

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