Scientia Agricola (Apr 2006)

Variability of water balance components in a coffee crop in Brazil

  • Adriana Lúcia da Silva,
  • Renato Roveratti,
  • Klaus Reichardt,
  • Osny Oliveira Santos Bacchi,
  • Luis Carlos Timm,
  • Isabeli Pereira Bruno,
  • Julio César Martins Oliveira,
  • Durval Dourado Neto

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 63, no. 2
pp. 105 – 114

Abstract

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Establishing field water balances is difficult and costly, the variability of their components being the major problem to obtain reliable results. This component variability is presented herein for a coffee crop grown in the Southern Hemisphere, on a tropical soil with 10% slope. It was observed that: rainfall has to be measured with an appropriate number of replicates; irrigation can introduce great variability into calculations; evapotranspiration, calculated as a remainder of the water balance equation, has exceedingly high coefficients of variation; the soil water storage component is the major contributor in error propagation calculations to estimate evapotranspiration; and that runoff can be satisfactorily controlled on the 10% slope through crop management practices.

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