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Journal ArticleDOI

Irrigation scheduling of cotton in a climate with uncertain rainfall

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TLDR
In this paper, an investigation was made of the irrigation requirements of cotton grown in a sub-humid environment with significant but highly variable rainfall, and it was found that 70% of this amount could be depleted before irrigation without loss of yield.
Abstract
An investigation was made of the irrigation requirements of cotton grown in a sub-humid environment with significant but highly variable rainfall. In the first year of the study, no additional yield benefits accrued to subsequent irrigations following a pre-emergent irrigation due to above average rainfall (550 mm) throughout the growing season. In the second year a similar rainfall amount (502 mm) fell but significant yield increases to irrigation resulted due to the uneven distribution of the rainfall. The main effect was associated with later rains which influenced the number of bolls set. The maximum amount of water extracted by cotton from a deep grey cracking clay was 178 mm. It was found that 70% of this amount could be depleted before irrigation without loss of yield. Crop evapotranspiration varied from 607 mm with no irrigation after emergence to 775 mm following three irrigations. Irrigation was associated with significant losses from rainfall runoff. Too frequent irrigation creates a risk that soil will be too wet to permit utilisation of natural rainfall. Therefore, the use of soil water information to maximise the interval between irrigation is proposed as a necessary basis for efficient irrigation management.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The yield potential of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.)

TL;DR: Yield potential is defined as yields that can be obtained with current cultivars and systems under ideal conditions in the absence of poor weather, disease, soil or nutritional constraints with management and genetics optimised.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.): Physiological and morphological responses to water deficits and their relationship to yield.

TL;DR: It is suggested that soil water deficits reduced the capacity of the crop to carry fruit as a result of lower rates of leaf photosynthesis, and therefore yield per unit of available water was reduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water-use efficiency and productivity trends in Australian irrigated cotton: a review

TL;DR: Changes in irrigated cotton water use from research projects and on-farm practice-change programs in Australia are reported, in relation to both plant-based and irrigation engineering disciplines, to indicate potential for further improvement in water-use efficiency and productivity on Australian cotton farms.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of drip and furrow irrigated cotton on a cracking clay soil

TL;DR: The potential of drip irrigation to increase irrigation water use efficiency, to decrease waterlogging caused by irrigation, and to conserve soil structure, especially when combined with reduced tillage was studied in an experiment comparing surface (SD) and buried (BD) methods of drivable irrigation with furrow irrigation (F) of cotton in a cracking grey clay (vertisol) over four seasons as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationships between plant and soil water status in five field-grown cotton (gossypium hirsutum l.) cultivars

TL;DR: Calculated FTSW from soil water content measurements provided an efficient way to conduct genotypic comparison of plant response to drought in field conditions over two years of contrasted rainfall pattern, indicating that the higher dehydration avoidance of one of the cultivars is not linked to stomatal regulation, but probably to osmotic adjustment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Assessment of Surface Heat Flux and Evaporation Using Large-Scale Parameters

TL;DR: In this article, the large-scale parameterization of the surface fluxes of sensible and latent heat is properly expressed in terms of energetic considerations over land while formulas of the bulk aerodynamic type are most suitahle over the sea.
Journal ArticleDOI

Model for predicting evaporation from a row crop with incomplete cover

TL;DR: In this article, a model for calculating the daily evaporation rate from a crop surface was presented for a row crop canopy situation in which the soil water supply to the plant roots was not limited and the crop has not come into an advanced stage of maturation or senescence.
Book

Vegetation and hydrology

H. L. Penman
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