Abstract

Cultivation under screens and in screenhouses protects the crops from insects and extreme climate conditions and allows water saving. Previous studies considered the aerodynamic properties of boundary layers along two types of screens: a small shading thermal screen covering a hedgerow citrus orchard and a large 50-mesh, insect-proof screen covering a pepper plantation. To extend the previous results, a third type of screen was analysed in this study, a large flat-roof 17-mesh white woven shading screen covering a banana plantation. Vertical profiles of wind speed, air temperature, relative humidity, and friction velocity were measured by a lifting tower, and wind profiles were analysed under near-neutral atmospheric stability. Results show that normalised friction velocity, normalised roughness length, normalised zero plane displacement height and aerodynamic resistance are closer to the previous results of the large insect-proof screenhouse than those of the small shade net.

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