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Journal ArticleDOI

AquaCrop-The FAO Crop Model to Simulate Yield Response to Water: I. Concepts and Underlying Principles

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TLDR
The FAO crop model AquaCrop as mentioned in this paper is a water-driven growth engine, in which transpiration is calculated first and translated into biomass using a conservative, crop-specific parameter: the biomass water productivity, normalized for atmospheric evaporative demand and air CO 2 concentration.
Abstract
This article introduces the FAO crop model AquaCrop. It simulates attainable yields of major herbaceous crops as a function of water consumption under rainfed, supplemental, deficit, and full irrigation conditions. The growth engine of AquaCrop is water-driven, in that transpiration is calculated first and translated into biomass using a conservative, crop-specific parameter: the biomass water productivity, normalized for atmospheric evaporative demand and air CO 2 concentration. The normalization is to make AquaCrop applicable to diverse locations and seasons. Simulations are performed on thermal time, but can be on calendar time, in daily time-steps. The model uses canopy ground cover instead of leaf area index (LAI) as the basis to calculate transpiration and to separate out soil evaporation from transpiration. Crop yield is calculated as the product of biomass and harvest index (HI). At the start of yield formation period, HI increases linearly with time after a lag phase, until near physiological maturity. Other than for the yield, there is no biomass partitioning into the various organs. Crop responses to water deficits are simulated with four modifiers that are functions of fractional available soil water modulated by evaporative demand, based on the differential sensitivity to water stress of four key plant processes: canopy expansion, stomatal control of transpiration, canopy senescence, and HI. The HI can be modified negatively or positively, depending on stress level, timing, and canopy duration. AquaCrop uses a relatively small number of parameters (explicit and mostly intuitive) and attempts to balance simplicity, accuracy, and robustness. The model is aimed mainly at practitioner-type end-users such as those working for extension services, consulting engineers, governmental agencies, nongovernmental organizations, and various kinds of farmers associations. It is also designed to fit the need of economists and policy specialists who use simple models for planning and scenario analysis.

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Citations
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Rising Temperatures Reduce Global Wheat Production

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TL;DR: The authors systematically tested 30 different wheat crop models of the Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project against field experiments in which growing season mean temperatures ranged from 15 degrees C to 32 degrees C, including experiments with artificial heating.
Book ChapterDOI

United nations framework convention on climate change (unfccc)

TL;DR: The Paris Agreement is widely recognized as the most significant environmental treaty ever adopted, with strong positive implications on development, international cooperation and, of course, for the climate as discussed by the authors, and the ambition is to hold the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2oC above pre-industrial levels and pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5oC.

Reaping the Benefits: Science and the sustainable intensification of global agriculture

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that major improvements are needed to the way that scientific research is funded and used, and that sustainable intensification of crop production requires a clear definition of agricultural sustainability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deficit irrigation as an on-farm strategy to maximize crop water productivity in dry areas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize the advantages and disadvantages of deficit irrigation and compare them with field research and crop water productivity modeling, concluding that a certain minimum amount of seasonal moisture must be guaranteed.
Journal ArticleDOI

AquaCrop — The FAO Crop Model to Simulate Yield Response to Water: II. Main Algorithms and Software Description

TL;DR: The AquaCrop model was developed to replace the former FAO I&D Paper 33 procedures for the estimation of crop productivity in relation to water supply and agronomic management in a framework based on current plant physiological and soil water budgeting concepts as discussed by the authors.
References
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Book

Crop evapotranspiration : guidelines for computing crop water requirements

TL;DR: In this paper, an updated procedure for calculating reference and crop evapotranspiration from meteorological data and crop coefficients is presented, based on the FAO Penman-Monteith method.
Book

Physiological Plant Ecology

TL;DR: Life in the Solar System, and Beyond, and beyond, and In the Right Place at the Right Time.
Journal ArticleDOI

The DSSAT cropping system model

TL;DR: The benefits of the new, re-designed DSSAT-CSM will provide considerable opportunities to its developers and others in the scientific community for greater cooperation in interdisciplinary research and in the application of knowledge to solve problems at field, farm, and higher levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plant Responses to Water Stress

TL;DR: The role of turgor and sensitivity to stress, as well as growth adjustments during and after stress, are studied.
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