Abstract

Inaccurate crop coefficients are major contributing sources of uncertainty that lead to inefficient use of limited available water resources. Understanding the need to improve water use efficiency in South Africa’s fruit industry, this study evaluated the method of deriving crop coefficients developed by Allen and Pereira (2009) over a variety of irrigated fruit tree crops. Detailed data of transpiration, evapotranspiration and weather variables measured using the heat ratio method, eddy covariance method and automatic weather stations, were collected from a water research funding body established by the South African government. This study adjusted the stomatal sensitivity function (Fr) in the model by replacing the ratio of the leaf resistance (rl) to the standard leaf resistance of a reference crop (100 sm−1) with rl/α where α is a resistance parameter for the specific crop. The resistance parameter was solved accordingly for each fruit type. Respective unique α values were obtained as: macadamia nuts (200 sm−1), citrus (50 s m−1), peaches (20 s m−1) and pecans (20 s m−1). These unique values were used to simulate basal and single crop coefficients that produced satisfactory results when compared to the actual measured values. Overly, no unique standard α value exists for most tree crops although a value close to 20 sm−1 may give reasonable estimates for pome and stone fruit. Crop coefficients derived using locally measured data were standardised and tabulated in a format that facilitates their transferability between sites. However, there is still a need to acquire crop specific information to parameterize α and improve accuracies.

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