2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): Evapotranspiration: Measured with a Lysimeter vs. Calculated with a Recursive Method.

703-2 Evapotranspiration: Measured with a Lysimeter vs. Calculated with a Recursive Method.



Wednesday, 8 October 2008: 1:30 PM
George R. Brown Convention Center, 362DE
Robert J. Lascano, USDA-ARS Cropping Systems Research Laboratory, 3810 4th Street, Lubbock, TX 79415, Steven Evett, USDA-ARS, Conservation and Production Research Laboratory, P.O. Drawer 10, Bushland, TX 79012 and Cornelius H. M. van Bavel, Professor Emeritus - Texas A&M University, 245 Pecan Valley Road, Center Point, TX 78010
Recently, a recursive combination method (RCM) to calculate potential and crop evapotranspiration (ET) was given by Lascano and Van Bavel (Agron. J. 2007, 99:585-590). The RCM differs from the Penman-Monteith (PM) method in that the assumptions made regarding the temperature and humidity of the evaporating surface in the PM are not necessary when using the RCM. Rather, the RCM solves ET by finding the temperature and the humidity by iteration and therefore satisfies the energy balance. We compared values of alfalfa-ET measured with a large lysimeter in Bushland, TX, for a range of environmental conditions, to those calculated with the RCM. The RCM is based on the same physical principles of the PM but uses iteration to find an accurate answer of ET and can be easily implemented using commercially available mathematical software such as Excel® and Mathcad®.