Abstract

The present work aims at approaching the study of the performance and uncertainty associated with an irrigation scheduling method based on a soil-water balance. On a daily time step, a water-balance-based irrigation scheduling model has been developed. A Monte Carlo simulation of the irrigation scheduling model is developed using a series of actual daily weather data of evapotranspiration and precipitation and bootstrapping stochastic technique to resampling them. Performance evaluation measurements and their uncertainty are studied by means of several parameters: reliability, resiliency, vulnerability, total irrigation water allocation, total water loosed by deep percolation, and actual evapotranspiration/potential evapotranspiration rate along the growing season. The behaviors of 12 different types of soils (between coarse-textured soils and fine-textured soils) are compared using pedotransfer functions. Total available water (TAW) is the most important hydraulic property of the soil as far as irrigatio...

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