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MODELLING WATER PRODUCTIVITY OF MAIZE CROP UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL

MODELLING WATER PRODUCTIVITY OF MAIZE CROP UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL. By: Eng. KAPKWANG, Charles Chepkewel Prof. Emmanuel C. Kipkorir - UoE Date: 4 th July 2014. Introduction.

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MODELLING WATER PRODUCTIVITY OF MAIZE CROP UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL

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  1. MODELLING WATER PRODUCTIVITY OF MAIZE CROP UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL By: Eng.KAPKWANG, Charles Chepkewel Prof. Emmanuel C. Kipkorir -UoE Date: 4th July 2014

  2. Introduction • Irrigation - is significant & essential in arid environments used to increase crop water productivity in semiarid & humid regions. • Kenya's total irrigated area is about 80,000 ha. Both public & private small-scale irrigation is still less than 50,000 ha. This is still very small as compared to the estimated potential of more than 300,000 ha (Carter, 1994). • Anticipated that Kenya agricultural sector will compete with domestic & industry for the increasingly scarce water resources, yet is under pressure to produce more food and fibre with less water to satisfy the food needs of its fast growing population. • Pressure on arable land is high & future increase in agricultural production depends on the possibilities of increasing yield levels per ha, as well as bringing unused & marginal lands under cultivation. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  3. Study Area NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  4. Scheme Layout NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  5. Background of the Problem Sustainability of irrigated agriculture in Eldume irrigation scheme is at risk: • Watershed degradation along river Molo resulting in reduced river flows hence decreasing supply available for irrigation & irrigation costs are rising. • Due to unpredictable & uneven rainfall patterns. • More frequent droughts & floods due to low/high-variable rainfall & high evaporation rates. • Inadequate optimization strategy in irrigation i.e. when & how much to irrigate, for each water application. Optimizing control & scheduling parameters in irrigation is considered as a nested problem to the farmers. • Water deficits have negatively affected food security because of declining levels of production particularly maize which forms the basis of applying AquaCrop model in simulating maize crop yield under deficit irrigation in ASAL environments. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  6. Justification of the Research • Threat to food security & agricultural productivity adequate for its fast increasing population esp. ``arid & semi-arid lands’’ under irrigation. • Need of utilization of abandoned land reclamation as result of water scarcity. • Need for water mgt strategies to solve declining maize crop yield due to water stress. • Dissemination of knowledge & understanding of short season maize variety irrigation schedule to water engineers, farmers associations, government agencies on mgt of limited water resource. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  7. Research Objectives Broad Objective • To establish the performance of maize crop yield under water deficit irrigation schedules in order to enhance future water use efficiency & planning. Specific Objectives • To conduct an on-field experiment of maize crop grown in a semi-arid climate with treatments of different water stress levels. • To calibrate and validate the AquaCrop model for Eldume irrigation scheme based on maize field trials. • To apply the Aquacrop model to simulate the scenarios of crop yield under water stress conditions on maize production in Eldume irrigation scheme. • To apply the SPSS model to test the statistical significance of the AquaCrop model in modeling crop water productivity in a semi-arid irrigation system. • To utilize Excel Optimization Model to determine the best irrigation interval/events in the system for future maize crop irrigation water mgt. NIB, 3-4/07/2014CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  8. Methodology- AquaCrop Input Parameters • Climate data- Collected from HOBO meteorological weather station (KARI –MARIGAT) (Rainfall, Max & Min Temp, Relative Humidity, wind speed ) • Reference Evapotranspiration – FA0 56 Penman Monteith Equation-Use of ETo calculator software • Crop Inputs - Canopy cover measurements – Use of Meter rule - measured on weekly basis • Soil input - Soil textural class – Soil Sampling ( 4 sampling points) – hydrometer method in Laboratory & involved determining percentage proportion of sand, silt and clay) • Pedo-transfer functions generated by soil texture triangle to evaluate moisture retained at field capacity and permanent wilting point, hydraulic conductivity & bulk density. • Irrigation water applied – Use of Parshall flume measurements (head measurements & timing to compute Q – Discharge (m^3/s) and Volume applied (m^3). NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  9. Climatic data collection-Hobo weather station (Marigat) NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  10. Field Trial Plots Details Layout Showing Irrigation Furrows & Feeder Canals. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  11. On-Field experiment (34 days after sowing). Physical characteristics of the 5 days Irrigation Interval Physical characteristics of the 7 days Irrigation Interval NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  12. On-Field experiment –(Crop Input) cont’d Physical characteristics of the 10 days irrigation interval Physical characteristics of the 12 days irrigation interval NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  13. On-Field experiment -Soil input Soil sampling at the experimental site Laboratory results- Soilbulk properties calculator (K.E.Saxton et al., 1986) NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  14. .Installation of Portable Parshall flume for water measurement NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  15. CropParameters and program settings calibrated for Eldume irrigation maize crop NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  16. Input parameters and Program Settings for Calibration Soil Inputs Climate Inputs NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  17. Field Trial Simulation Results Simulation results for 5 days Irrigation Interval Simulation results for 7days Irrigation Interval NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  18. AquaCrop Yield Simulation results (cont’d) Simulation results for 10 days Irrigation Interval Simulation results for 12 days Irrigation Interval NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  19. Simulated Canopy Cover (%) and Linear regression plot for treatment 1. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  20. Simulated Canopy Cover (%) and Linear regression plot for treatment 2. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  21. Simulated Canopy Cover (%) and Linear regression plot for treatment 3. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  22. Simulated Canopy Cover (%) and Linear regression plot for treatment 4. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  23. Maize crop production, crop water productivity & water use efficiency NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  24. Comparison of Simulated Vs Observed aboveground biomass for 5, 7, 10 & 12 days irrigation intervals NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  25. Comparison of Simulated Vs Observed grain yield for 5, 7, 10 & 12 days irrigation intervals NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  26. Validation of the AquaCrop model Results of combined observed and simulated model output. Validation of observed & simulated yield in a single plot. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  27. Dependent Variable: Observed grain yield (ton/ha) NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  28. Pair wise comparisons: Dependent variable of observed grain yield (ton/ha) NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  29. Estimated marginal means of observed grain yield(ton/ha) NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  30. Treatments Scenario analysis Full supply scenario (100%) Water supply of 75% NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  31. Scenario analysis Water supply of 50% Water supply of 25% NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  32. Scenarios summary results of area, water & benefits under 0%, 25%, 50% and 75% water shortage for the four treatments. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  33. Conclusion • The variation of irrigation water from the non-water stressed to severe water stressed experimental blocks indicates that maize production depends majorly on the amount of water supplied to the crops throughout the season. • AquaCrop model accurately predicted the simulation of the system reasonably well as it resulted in a linear relationship of an increased/decreased yield for maize crop. • The model gave more reliable estimates of crop yield, however results indicated a decline from 6.183 ton/ha to 3.015 ton/ha for a non-water stressed to severely water stressed treatment indicating a water deficit scenario. • Based on optimal maize crop revenue collected, the best irrigation interval good for practice at Eldume irrigation scheme was the 7 days interval with 13 irrigation events per season. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  34. Recommendation • Construction of water reservoirs due to water deficit for sustainable irrigation systems. • Conservation of the environment to curb watershed degradation especially on the country’s water towers & along river sources. • Efforts towards use of crop water modeling tools in research to eliminate the current problems of food insecurity. NIB, 3-4/07/2014«MODELLING CROP WATER PRODUCTIVITY UNDER DEFICIT IRRIGATION USING AquaCrop MODEL.»

  35. THANK YOU

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