DEFICIT IRRIGATION OF COTTON FOR INCREASING GROUNDWATER USE IN CLAY SOILS

Citation
Y. Cohen et al., DEFICIT IRRIGATION OF COTTON FOR INCREASING GROUNDWATER USE IN CLAY SOILS, Agronomy journal, 87(5), 1995, pp. 808-814
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
00021962
Volume
87
Issue
5
Year of publication
1995
Pages
808 - 814
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-1962(1995)87:5<808:DIOCFI>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
The interactive effects of a shallow, highly saline water table and ir rigation management on crop production have not been clarified, due to difficulties in measuring crop water use, The detrimental effects of a rising water table and salinization due to irrigation can be elimina ted, provided irrigation scheduling is based on a broad knowledge of c rop water requirements, A deficit irrigation approach was used to (i) minimize deep percolation and (ii) study the capability of cotton (Gos sypium hirsutum L.) to use water from the soil profile and from lower groundwater, Measurements of sap flow in the stem by the heat pulse me thod were used to determine transpiration. Transpiration of the mature cotton crop was nearly 20% lower than potential transpiration, Reduce d irrigation application did not stimulate root expansion into wet, de ep soil layers; therefore, it resulted in a reduction of the transpira tion rate below its maximum rate, An appreciable water uptake from gro undwater did not occur, presumably because of high sensitivity of the cotton root system to high soil density, Although the leaching fractio n was nearly zero, salt accumulation in the root zone during the growi ng season was low.