Water Resources 

Main Contacts for Initiative

Jonathan Winter and Jose Lopez

Brief Description of Activity 

Develop research that assesses the effects of climate change and variability on irrigated crops in the United States and throughout the world, as well as build collaborative opportunities to create a portfolio of research at the interface of water and agriculture within the AgMIPframework.

Overview of Participants 

Jonathan Winter, Jose Lopez, Joshua Elliott, GerritHoogenboom, Cheryl Porter, Alex Ruane

Current Research Focus

Quantifying the impacts of sustainable (withdrawals = recharge) irrigation water use in the United States.

Recent Noteworthy Finding

Water productivity (WP) can be significantly improved using irrigation schedules optimized by growth stage in water restricted scenarios.  For example, the mean WP across 38 years of maize production at a site in Florida was 1.1 kg m-3for non-optimized irrigation schedules with 50 mm of seasonal available water and 2.1 kg m-3with optimized irrigation schedules, a 91% improvement.

Recent Papers

Water availability constraints on United States irrigated agricultural productivity, winter 2018.

Prior Updates

 

Co-leaders and Main Contacts for Initiative

Law Abuja, K. J. Boote, and Jerry Hatfield. 

 

Overview

Soil water limitation and crop water deficit are major problems in most production regions, and will increasingly be affected by climate change factors and weather variability. Improving model processes related to water are of critical importance in the AgMIP model intercomparison and improvement project because crop water deficit is the outcome of uncertain predicted evapotranspiration and difficult-to-model root uptake of soil water, coupled to soil water infiltration, drainage, and soil water-holding traits. The methods of soil-root water uptake, crop transpiration, and soil evaporation tend to be repeated across different crops within a given modeling platform, but typically vary among modeling platforms. In addition, the effect of water deficit on growth, which in turn affects future water demand, is also treated differently by models.

Experience so far in AgMIP crop teams, indicates nearly two-fold variation among models in predicted evapotranspiration as well as large differences in predicted plant transpiration and soil evaporation. Present soil-crop models may be inadequate to account for within-season extreme events of temperature, evaporative demand, rainfall, or soil moisture, outside the normal weather/climate conditions under which most models are developed. Hence, there is a need to improve the temporal process understanding of soil-plant interaction responses to these extreme events, and how management practices modify the responses. Because the issues seem connected to model platforms and modules rather than crops, this initiative will not emphasize given crops, but will aim for data sets that have combinations of measured evapotranspiration, measured soil water balance, and measured in-season crop performance under soil water regimes ranging from fully irrigated to severely water-limited, and including extreme weather events.

These data sets will be used to intercompare, evaluate, and improve crop models for accurate prediction of soil water uptake (soil water balance), soil water evaporation, crop transpiration, crop evapotranspiration, and crop dry matter prediction under different soil water supplies ranging from fully irrigated to severely limiting soil water conditions in different evaporative demand and weather extremes with different soil traits. Improving crop models for response to water limitation is critically important for climate impact assessment, and for model use as decision support systems for producers, industry, researchers and policy makers and also as teaching tools/aids.

 

Objectives

  1. To identify and aggregate high-quality data sets on measured evapotranspiration (ET, hopefully E and T separately) with time:
    1. Lysimeter,
    2. Micrometeorological techniques (Bowen ratio, flux profile, eddy correlation), and
    3. Soil water balance (measurement method and frequency, knowledge of runoff-percolation)With Ancillary data on:
    4. Crop growth data (phenology, leaf area and biomass at different growth stages, yield)
    5. Soil profile description
    6. Meteorological data
  2. To conduct multi-model intercomparisons against data on ET, soil water balance, and water-limited crop growth.
  3. To evaluate individual modules for ET, E, T, soil water uptake, soil water balance, and water stress effects on growth within several existing model platforms.
  4. To recommend and document improvements in modules and parameters related to prediction of soil water evaporation, crop transpiration, soil water uptake, soil water balance, and water stress effects on plant growth.
  5. To recommend more standard methods for describing soil-water supplying traits of different soils, including rooting distributions and root water uptake.
  6. Produce multi-model assessment of relative water-limited production potential of various crops in various areas and land-types around the world, with and without improved modules.
  7. Produce multi-model assessment of the impacts of climate change on crop production, with and without improved modules.

Crops: Not crop-specific. However, the initial crop and order of crops studied will be determined according to availability of ET data. Most of the presently available ET data is for maize, thus, initial efforts will begin with AgMIP maize modelers and model platforms capable of simulating maize. Other crops, such as wheat will follow.

Potential List of Model Platforms (within which modules will be evaluated): DSSAT, APSIM, EPIC, RZWQM, CropSyst, etc.

Status: An initial organizational meeting of 45 interested persons was held November 2, 2014, in Long Beach, California during which plans were developed, protocols discussed, and available ET data sets described. Two actions were recommended:

1) multi-model testing of maize models against ET data sets on maize (led by Jerry Hatfield, contact jerry.hatfield@ars.usda.gov), and

2) testing of different modules for a process within model platforms against intermediate data sets on maize (led by Laj Ahuja, contact Laj.Ahuja@ARS.USDA.GOV). The AgMIP Water ET team will meet Feb 25-28 during the AgMIP Global Workshop, to establish the specific data sets to be used for these two activities as well as the protocols for blind and calibration phase testing.