Abstract

An eddy correlation system (ECS) was used to estimate evapotranspiration (E) in a daily drip irrigated cotton field. Cotton yield, water use, and their ratio (Water use efficiency; WUE) were compared in four irrigation treatments. Three treatments were irrigated at levels of 85, 100, and 115% of E, while the fourth was irrigated according to grower's usual practice. E data were used to verify a one dimensional numerical model which simulates, in real time, the different energy fluxes existing in the soil-plant-atmosphere system. The model requires input of vegetation parameters (leaf area index, photometric properties, shading factor, root density distribution), soil parameters texture, hydraulic and photo-metric properties, temporal micrometeorological data (solar radiation, wind speed, air temperature and humidity) measured above the field, and irrigation quantities. The verification study was carried out during a cotton growing season in Hula Valley, Northern Israel. Results show that E rates are strongly affected by the intensity and arrival time of the inland penetrating Mediterranean sea breeze. WUE in the treatment which was irrigated according to the ECS was highest. Accurate estimations were also made by the model.

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