Abstract

A study was conducted at the Lacombe Research Centre to quantify and simulate the impacts of forage and grazing systems on soil water content. Four forages used in the study were alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.), a mixture of meadow bromegrass (Bromus riparius L.) and alfalfa, an annual pasture and an old grass pasture that was composed of mainly quackgrass (Elytrigia repens L.), smooth bromegrass (Bromus inermis L.) and Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis L .). Within each 1.2-ha paddock were two grazing treatments: rotational grazed and ungrazed. Soil water measurements to a 65-cm depth were conducted between May and October of 1999 and 2000 using a neutron moisture probe. Total soil water was affected by forage species more than grazing. Actual evapotranspiration rates were 3-4 mm d-1 in both years. Simulation of daily volumetric soil water content (%) for each year was conducted using the Versatile Soil Moisture Budget (VB2000) model on grazed alfalfa, ungrazed alfalfa, grazed annual and ungrazed annual treatments. During calibration year of 1999, the overall modeling efficiency (EF) was 0.58 while, during the evaluation year it was 0.43. Further, simulations for alfalfa were better than those for annual treatments. These EF values are relatively low indicating substantial discrepancies between observed and simulated results, which could have been attributed to a combination of input data errors, model errors and propagation errors in output. Key words: Evapotranspiration, forages, model calibration, model evaluation, versatile soil moisture budget model

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