Effective Rainfall in Poorly Drained Microirrigated Citrus Orchards
2002
Obreza, T. A. | Pitts, D. J.
Effective rainfall (ER) is the portion of total rainfall that plants use to help meet their consumptive water requirements, and is an important component of water resource budgeting for irrigation. The USDA's Technical Release no. 21 (TR-21) is used to predict ER and irrigation requirements for south Florida citrus, but its accuracy is in question due to high-intensity rainfall, poorly drained soils, and partial irrigation coverage in microirrigated orchards. We evaluated the calculation of ER by TR-21 under these conditions by monitoring rainfall, irrigation, water table depth, evapotranspiration (ET), and soil water content inside and outside of the microirrigation-wetted pattern in four orchards for a total of 83 site-months. We developed a soil water budget to calculate daily water table upflux, root zone water content, water used, and ER separately for the irrigated and nonirrigated root zones. Water budget ER calculated by site ranged between −3.3% and +18.2% of TR-21 ER, with a mean of +10%. A linear correlation between water budget ER and TR-21 ER using pooled data from all four sites yielded the equation: Water Budget ER (mm) = 0.79 [TR-21 ER (mm)] + 17.7, r = 0.84. A hypothetical ER comparison using 30-yr mean rainfall and ET data showed that annual ER calculated by TR-21 amounted to 673 mm, while water budget ER totaled 744 mm, or +10.5%. We suggest that the TR-21 method has the level of accuracy needed to allocate water for microirrigated citrus on poorly drained south Florida soils.
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