Abstract

In the context of growing evidence of climate change and the fact that agriculture uses about 70% of all the water available for irrigation in semi-arid areas, there is an increasing probability of water scarcity scenarios. Water irrigation optimization is, therefore, one of the main goals of researchers and stakeholders involved in irrigated agriculture. Irrigation scheduling is often conducted based on simple water requirement calculations without accounting for the strong link between water movement in the root zone, soil–water–crop productivity and irrigation expenses. In this work, we present a combined simulation and optimization framework aimed at estimating irrigation parameters that maximize the crop net margin. The simulation component couples the movement of water in a variably saturated porous media driven by irrigation with crop water uptake and crop yields. The optimization component assures maximum gain with minimum cost of crop production during a growing season. An application of the method demonstrates that an optimal solution exists and substantially differs from traditional methods. In contrast to traditional methods, results show that the optimal irrigation scheduling solution prevents water logging and provides a more constant value of water content during the entire growing season within the root zone. As a result, in this case, the crop net margin cost exhibits a substantial increase with respect to the traditional method. The optimal irrigation scheduling solution is also shown to strongly depend on the particular soil hydraulic properties of the given field site.

Highlights

  • Agriculture is the largest consumer of freshwater and accounts for 70% of current human water use (FAO 2011)

  • Irrigation scheduling is typically conducted based on simple water requirement calculations without accounting for the strong link between water movement in the root zone, crop yields and irrigation expenses

  • We have presented a combined simulation and optimization framework aimed at estimating irrigation parameters that maximize the crop net margin cost subject to operational and functional constraints

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Summary

Introduction

Agriculture is the largest consumer of freshwater and accounts for 70% of current human water use (FAO 2011). We present a combined simulation and optimization framework aimed at obtaining the irrigation scheduling parameters that maximizes crop yield with minimum applied water while guaranteeing maximum net profit without soil salinization.

Results
Conclusion
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