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Water Requirements for Irrigation and the Environment 2009 ed. [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 174 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 990 g, XVI, 174 p., 1 Hardback
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Dec-2008
  • Leidėjas: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 1402089473
  • ISBN-13: 9781402089473
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 174 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 990 g, XVI, 174 p., 1 Hardback
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Dec-2008
  • Leidėjas: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 1402089473
  • ISBN-13: 9781402089473
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Irrigated agriculture produces about 40% of all food and fibre on about 16% of all cropped land. As such, irrigated agriculture is a productive user of resources; both in terms of yield per cropped area and in yield per volume of water consumed. Many irrigation projects, however, use (divert or withdraw) much more water than consumed by the crop. The non-consumed fraction of the water may cause a variety of undesirable effects ranging from water-logging and salinity within the irrigated area to downstram water pollution.



This book discusses all components of the water balance of an irrigated area; evapotranspiration (Ch.2), effective precipitation (Ch.3) and capillary rise from the groundwater table (Ch.4). Chapter 5 then combines all components into a water management strategy that balances actual evapotranspiration (and thus crop yield) with the groundwater balance of the irrigated area (for a substainable environment). Chapter 6 presents CRIWAR 3.0, a simulation program that combines all water balance components into a single simulation procedure. The chapter describes the use of the CRIWAR software for developing water requirement tables and other useful information based on the selected water management strategy. This version greatly expands upon the capabilities of previously published programs.
Introduction
1(12)
Growth of Vegetation
1(3)
Crop Growth and Evapotranspiration
4(1)
The Water Balance of an Area
5(2)
The Water Balance of an Irrigated Field
7(1)
Calculating the Crop Irrigation Water Requirements
8(2)
ETp - Pe in the Field Water Balance
10(1)
The Irrigation Ratios
11(1)
Structure of the Handbook
11(2)
Evapotranspiration
13(68)
Introduction
13(1)
Developments in Theory
14(9)
Evaporation from Open Water: The Penman Method
17(4)
The FAO Modified Penman Method
21(2)
The Penman-Monteith Approach
23(13)
The Equation
23(3)
Effect of Time Step Size on Calculations
26(1)
Computation of Parameters for the Penman-Monteith Reference Equation
26(9)
Limited Data Availability and Weather Data Integrity
35(1)
The Hargreaves-Samani Method
36(1)
Discussion
37(2)
The Potential ET
39(25)
The Crop Coefficient Curve
41(2)
The Climatic Basis of Table 2.5
43(1)
Lengths of Crop Growth Stages
43(12)
Single Kc for the Initial Stage (Annual Crops)
55(8)
Kc Curves for Forage Crops
63(1)
The Dual Kc Method: Incorporating Specific Wet Soil Effects
64(9)
Theory
64(4)
Water Balance of the Soil Surface Layer
68(2)
Application of the Basal Kcb Procedure over a Growing Season
70(3)
ET During the Non-growing Season
73(1)
Evapotranspiration from Landscapes
73(3)
Estimating Kc from the Fraction of Ground Cover
76(2)
Effects of Surface Mulching on Kc
78(3)
Plastic Mulches
79(1)
Organic Mulches
80(1)
Effective Precipitation
81(22)
Introduction
81(2)
Major Factors Affecting Effective Precipitation
83(5)
Amount and Frequency of Precipitation
83(2)
Time of Occurrence of Precipitation
85(1)
Rainfall Intensity
85(1)
Dry and Wet Spell Analysis
85(1)
Irrigated Crops
85(1)
Infiltration Rate
86(1)
Water-Holding Capacity
86(1)
Soil Water Movement
86(1)
Field Slope
87(1)
Land Surface Condition
87(1)
Depth to Groundwater
87(1)
Irrigation Water Supply Method
87(1)
Frequency of Water Application
88(1)
Scale Effect
88(1)
The USDA Method
88(3)
The Three Major Factors Used
88(1)
Calculation Method
89(2)
The Curve Number Method
91(12)
Background of the Method
91(3)
Factors Determining the Curve Number Value
94(3)
Estimating the Curve Number Value
97(6)
Capillary Rise
103(16)
Introduction
103(1)
The Driving Force of Capillary Water
103(3)
Steady-State Capillary Rise
106(2)
Fluctuation of Groundwater Depth and Soil Moisture
108(4)
Rooting Depth
112(1)
How To Correct for Capillary Rise?
113(6)
Irrigation Water Requirements
119(24)
The Concept
119(1)
The Field
120(8)
Dry-Foot Crops
122(2)
Paddy Rice
124(1)
Water Application Methods
125(3)
The Distribution System
128(4)
Example
132(5)
The Conveyance System
137(4)
Calculating Irrigation Water Requirements
141(2)
Using the CRIWAR Software
143(24)
Introduction
143(1)
Computer System Requirements
143(1)
Obtaining the Software
143(1)
Installation
144(1)
Starting the Program
144(1)
Software Overview
144(1)
Input Data Requirements
145(9)
Entering General Data
146(3)
Entering Meteorological Data
149(1)
Entering Cropping Pattern Data
150(3)
Entering Crop File Data
153(1)
Developing a Water Management Strategy
154(8)
Strategy for a Sustainable Water Balance
154(4)
Strategy on Water Requirement of the Irrigated Crop
158(2)
Analyzing Alternative Water Management Strategies
160(2)
Producing Output
162(1)
Tables & Graphs
162(1)
Program Options
162(2)
User Name
163(1)
Choose Units System
164(1)
Warnings and Error Messages
164(3)
Additional Warnings
164(3)
References 167(6)
Index 173