Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 16 segundos...
Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 4 Par: 4 (2012)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

A Simple Scheme for Modeling Irrigation Water Requirements at the Regional Scale Applied to an Alpine River Catchment

Pascalle C. Smith    
Pierluigi Calanca and Jürg Fuhrer    

Resumen

This paper presents a simple approach for estimating the spatial and temporal variability of seasonal net irrigation water requirement (IWR) at the catchment scale, based on gridded land use, soil and daily weather data at 500 × 500 m resolution. In this approach, IWR is expressed as a bounded, linear function of the atmospheric water budget, whereby the latter is defined as the difference between seasonal precipitation and reference evapotranspiration. To account for the effects of soil and crop properties on the soil water balance, the coefficients of the linear relation are expressed as a function of the soil water holding capacity and the so-called crop coefficient. The 12 parameters defining the relation were estimated with good coefficients of determination from a systematic analysis of simulations performed at daily time step with a FAO-type point-scale model for five climatically contrasted sites around the River Rhone and for combinations of six crop and ten soil types. The simple scheme was found to reproduce well results obtained with the daily model at six additional verification sites. We applied the simple scheme to the assessment of irrigation requirements in the whole Swiss Rhone catchment. The results suggest seasonal requirements of 32 × 106 m3 per year on average over 1981?2009, half of which at altitudes above 1500 m. They also disclose a positive trend in the intensity of extreme events over the study period, with an estimated total IWR of 55 × 106 m3 in 2009, and indicate a 45% increase in water demand of grasslands during the 2003 European heat wave in the driest area of the studied catchment. In view of its simplicity, the approach can be extended to other applications, including assessments of the impacts of climate and land-use change.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Zainab Jamroz, Insaf Ullah, Bilal Hassan, Noor Ul Amin, Muhammad Asghar Khan, Pascal Lorenz and Nisreen Innab    
The Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) overcomes the flaws in the traditional healthcare system by enabling remote administration, more effective use of resources, and the mobility of medical devices to fulfil the patient?s needs. The IoMT makes it simple... ver más
Revista: Future Internet

 
Kleber de Almeida Gonçalves, Daniela Silva Santurio, Delfim Soares, Pedro Alves Costa and Luís Godinho    
The use of boundary elements in the analysis of exterior acoustic problems poses challenges at specific frequencies, since fictitious eigenfrequencies may arise at the internal resonances of cavities, leading to inaccurate results or even unstable behavi... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Weifeng Xu, Xianku Zhang and Haoze Wang    
Tank level control has some unavoidable factors such as disturbance, non-linearity, and time lag. This paper proposes a simple and robust control scheme with nice energy-saving effects and smooth output to improve the quality of the controller and meet r... ver más

 
Ivan Benkov, Marian Varbanov, Tony Venelinov and Stefan Tsakovski    
The water quality assessment of the surface water bodies (SWBs) is one of the major tasks of environmental authorities dealing with water management. The present study proposes a water quality assessment scheme for the investigation of the surface waters... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Yongzhou Li, Di Sun, Zejun Wu and Kunyuan Zhang    
With the development of combined cycle engines, it is urgent to estimate more quickly and accurately the flow capture capacity and starting performance of variable geometry inlets over a wide Mach number range. Based on the flow field and parameter fitti... ver más
Revista: Aerospace