Abstract

Pivot-irrigation was managed with tensiometers on a field cropped with sugarcane at Analaiva (west coast of Madagascar). The volumes of water delivered by the pivot were 20 mm or less (expressed in terms of equivalent rain), depending on the stage of the crop. These applications were made when suctions at certain depths attained fixed values: a single value of 500 hPa in the top layer of the soil in the installation and growth stages of the crop, double values (600 hPa at 50 cm, 400 hPa at 150 cm) at the ripening stage. To characterize water movement in the soil, lines of isoflux were calculated from the hydrodynamic properties of the soil, and plotted so that the flux of water determined by the Darcy–Buckingham law would be read on the profile of hydraulic head. Maps of two-dimensional water movement were drawn independently from the data collected by an array of 30 tensiometers crossing a cane row. Before the rainy season, the water consumed by the crop corresponds to the irrigation water. At the ripening stage, an upward flux from the deep layer of the soil (wetted during the previous months of rains) is obtained by the strict management of irrigation.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call