Consumptive Use and Estimation of Irrigation Water Requirement
Consumptive Use and Estimation of Irrigation Water Requirement
Consumptive Use and Estimation of Irrigation Water Requirement
1. Definition
- Consumptive use (CU) is the amount of water used in transpiration, building of plant
tissue, together with evaporation from the adjacent soil, water and plant surfaces
during a specific time period.
- Evapotranspiration(ET) = Evaporation + Transpiration
- Transpiration is the process by which water vapor escapes from living plants,
principally the leaves, and enters the atmosphere. Evaporation is the water
evaporating from adjacent soil, water surfaces or from the surfaces of leaves of the
plant
- CU = ET + water used in building plant tissue
- Since the water used in building plant tissue is insignificant, CU = ET
2. Factors affecting ET
- Climatic factors: Solar radiation, temperature, humidity, wind speed, duration of light
- Soil factors: Texture, structure, hydraulic conductivity, moisture content
- Plant factors: Root characteristics, leaf characteristics, aerodynamic roughness
3. Direct Measurement of ET
a) Tanks or lysimeters
- A lysimeter is a device by which an experimental soil located in a container is
separated hydrologically from the surrounding soil
- Tanks filled with soil in which crops are grown under natural conditions.
- Artificial conditions are caused by soil, size of tank, regulation of water supply and
environment.
- Involves measurement of incoming and outgoing water of the container
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- Constant water level is maintained by daily addition (I)
ET = I + Re
- Precipitation (R) and irrigation (I) are measured by rain gauges and calibrated
container.
- Applicable where high water table exists
ET=I + Re- Dr ± W
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- Special arrangements are made to drain and measure the water percolating through
the soil mass.
- ET is determined by taking the weight of the tank and making adjustment for any
rain.
- Suitable for short time period.
I+R-RO-Dr-ET=-∆SW
ET = I+Re-Dr -ET+∆SW (Re = R-RO)
ET = ∆SW+Re-Dτ (applied between irrigations)
ET = ∆SW+Re (Dτ is assumed to be zero)
∆SW is measured by soil sampling
- First sampling 2 to 4 days after irrigation and second sampling 7 to 15 days after or
just before the next irrigation
- Only those sampling periods are considered in which rainfall is light.
- Cannot be applied where water table is high
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4. Estimation of ET using Empirical equations
Cu = consumptive use, cm
k = consumptive use coefficient (depends on type of crop, growth stage, and place).
Average values as recommended by Hargreaves is given in Table 2.9, Garg
Ep = evaporation measured by Class A pan, cm
- Reference crop is a hypothetical crop with an assumed crop height of 0.12m, a fixed
surface resistance of 70 sm-1 and an albedo of 0.23
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For monthly value, G = 0.14 (Ti – Ti-1)
Ti = mean air temperature for the month, i (C0 )
Ti-1 = mean air temperature for the previous month, i-1 (C0)
For 10-day or shorter period, G = 0
( ) ( )
Input data: Latitude and longitude of the area, Maximum and minimum temperature, mean
relative humidity, daily sunshine hours and wind speed
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ET of a specific crop, ETcrop = (Etr or Eto).kc
kc = crop coefficient
The crop coefficient is basically the ratio of the crop ET to reference ET and represents the
integrated effects of 4 primary characteristics: (Crop height, Albedo, Canopy resistance,
ground cover)
5. Effective Rainfall
- Effective rainfall is that part of rainfall which is available to meet ET needs of the crop
Re = R- DPR - SROR
R = total rainfall
DPR = deep percolation from rainfall
SROR = surface runoff from rainfall
Factors affecting Re :
- Rainfall characteristics (intensity, frequency and amount)
- Land slope
- Soil characteristics (depth, texture, structure, etc)
- Groundwater level
- Land management (bunding, terracing, etc)
- Crop characteristics (ET rate, root depth, ground cover, stage of growth)
- Carry-over soil moisture
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For wetland rice, NIR = Etc + PL – Re
PL = percolation loss
Ea = Water-application efficiency
9. Irrigation Efficiencies
- The concept of Ea fails to evaluate the irrigation practice when inadequate irrigation
occurs.
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Ws = water stored in the soil root zone during the irrigation
Wn = water needed in the root zone prior to the irrigation
Ed = 100(1- )
y = average numerical deviation in depth of water stored from average depth stored during
irrigation.
d = average depth of water stored during the irrigation.
- Maximum net benefit is often obtained by filling the root zone only every 2nd , 3rd or
4th irrigation due to non-uniform extraction of water by roots
- Economic consideration
- Leaching