Water (Oct 2023)

WINDS Model Simulation of Guayule Irrigation

  • Matthew E. Katterman,
  • Peter M. Waller,
  • Diaa Eldin M. Elshikha,
  • Gerard W. Wall,
  • Douglas J. Hunsaker,
  • Reid S. Loeffler,
  • Kimberly L. Ogden

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w15193500
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 19
p. 3500

Abstract

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The WINDS (Water-Use, Irrigation, Nitrogen, Drainage, and Salinity) model uses the FAO56 dual crop coefficient and a daily time-step soil–water balance to simulate evapotranspiration and water content in the soil profile. This research calibrated the WINDS model for simulation of guayule under full irrigation. Using data from a furrow irrigated two-season guayule experiment in Arizona, this research developed segmented curves for guayule basal crop coefficient, canopy cover, crop height and root growth. The two-season guayule basal crop coefficient (Kcb) curve included first and second season development, midseason, late-season and end-season growth stages. For a fully irrigated guayule crop, the year one midseason Kcb was 1.14. The second year Kcb development phase began after the crop was semi-dormant during the first winter. The second year Kcb value was 1.23. The two-season root growth curve included a growth phase during the first season, no growth during winter, and a second growth phase during the second winter. A table allocated fractions of total transpiration to soil layers as a function of root depth. With the calibrated tables and curves, the WINDS model simulated soil moisture content with a root mean squared error (RMSE) of 1- to 3-% volumetric water content in seven soil layers compared with neutron probe water contents during the two-year growth cycle. Thus, this research developed growth curves and accurately simulated evapotranspiration and water content for a two-season guayule crop.

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