Deakin University
Browse

Using soil surface temperature to assess soil evaporation in a drip irrigated vineyard

Version 2 2024-06-04, 05:01
Version 1 2013-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 05:01 authored by BL Kerridge, John HornbuckleJohn Hornbuckle, EW Christen, RD Faulkner
Evaporation from the soil is an important part of the water balance of a crop, when considering water use efficiency. In this paper, a non-intensive method is tested to estimate relative soil evaporation, which is based upon a linear function of soil surface temperature change between a saturated and drying soil. The relative evaporation (RE) method of Ben-Asher et al. (1983) was calibrated using microlysimeters and thermal imaging. Soil surface temperature in a drip irrigated vineyard was then collected using infrared temperature sensors mounted on a quad bike, on several days of the 2009-2010 season. Soil surface temperature in the vineyard ranged from 4.6. °C to 65.5. °C undervine and 6.8. °C to 75.6. °C in the middle of the row. The difference between daily minima and maxima of soil surface temperature ranged from 20.2. °C to 59.7. °C in the inter-row and 13.6. °C to 36.4. °C undervine. Relative evaporation averaged 54% of evaporation from a saturated soil in the inter-row and 97% undervine. Based upon the calculation of RE, the average daily amount of soil evaporation undervine was between 0.64. mm and 1.83. mm, and between 0.69. mm and 2.52. mm inter-row. The soil evaporation undervine and inter-row both exhibited spatial variability across the vineyard, however the undervine area had less spatial variability compared to the inter-row area.

History

Related Materials

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Elsevier B.V.

Journal

Agricultural water management

Volume

116

Pagination

128-141

ISSN

0378-3774

Publisher

Elsevier