Abstract

This paper mainly aims to illustrate an irrigation management tool to simulate scheduling of district-level water needs over the course of an irrigation season. The tool is mostly based on a daily model for simulating flow of water (and solutes) in heterogeneous agri-environmental systems (called FLOWS-HAGES). The model produces information on the daily evolution of: soil water contents and pressure potentials in the soil profile; water uptake and actual evapotranspiration; stress periods for each crop; return fluxes to the groundwater and their quality in terms of solute concentrations (e.g., nitrates). FLOWS-HAGES provides a daily list of hydrants to be operated according to water or crop-based criteria. The daily optimal sequence of hydrant use may thus be established by passing the volumes to be delivered on to the model for simulating the hydraulics of the irrigation network, in order to ensure that the discharges flowing inside the network of distribution pipes are delivered under optimal pressure head distribution in the system. All the above evaluations can be carried out in a stochastic framework to account for soil heterogeneity and climate changes. To illustrate the potential of FLOWS-HAGES, a case study was considered for a selected sector of the Irrigation District 10 in the “Sinistra Ofanto” irrigation system (southern Italy, Apulia region). In a 139 ha area (Sector 6 of the Irrigation District), soil profiles were analyzed for characterization of hydraulic properties variability. Hydraulic properties were determined by a combination of field and laboratory measurements. Model simulations were validated by comparing soil water storage simulated and measured by a sensor based on electromagnetic induction technique. Irrigation water volumes and frequency calculated by the model were compared to the volumes actually supplied by the farmers. Compared to the farmers behavior, the model simulates more frequent irrigations with lower irrigation volumes. Finally, some indexes of irrigation performance were calculated for each farm under study. The resulting maps provide useful information on the spatial distribution of farmer behavior, indicating the abuse or underuse of water as well as the fraction of the water lost by drainage following the irrigation method applied.

Highlights

  • Water scarcity and quality degradation are set to become the main environmental problems for all countries in the Mediterranean region in the near future

  • This paper aims to illustrate the application at district scale of a physically-based agro-hydrological model for identifying optimal irrigation water needs in a context of on-demand irrigation systems

  • To simulate the dynamics distribution of water in the soilwas profile by assuming irrigation time and volumes dynamics and distribution of water(2)intothe soil profile by assuming irrigation time and in volumes supplied by the farmer; simulate the dynamics andthe distribution of water the soil supplied by the farmer; (2)

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Summary

Introduction

Water scarcity and quality degradation are set to become the main environmental problems for all countries in the Mediterranean region in the near future. Due mainly to population growth, pressure on agriculture and demand for water to irrigate food crops have increased. Agriculture in Mediterranean countries (apart from those in the eastern Adriatic and France) accounted for 64% of overall demand in the period 2005–2010 In Mediterranean countries the irrigated area has more than doubled in 40 years, totaling. The growing demand for irrigation water will be mainly met by over-exploiting both renewable and fossil groundwater, prompting seawater intrusion which leads to soil salinization problems in the frequent cases of ineffective irrigation management. Irrigation is often wasteful and highly inefficient [2]

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