410-12 Didas- A New Approach and User-Friendly Software Package for Assisting Drip Irrigation Design and Scheduling.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics
See more from this Session: Soil Sensing for Crop Water Management: I

Wednesday, November 6, 2013: 1:30 PM
Tampa Convention Center, Room 21

Gregory Communar, Environmental Physics and Irrigation, Israeli ARO, Bet Dagan, Israel and Shmulik Friedman, P.O.B 15159, Agricultural Research Organization of Israel, Rishon LeZion, ISRAEL
Abstract:
The DIDAS software package was developed for the purpose of assisting irrigators in the design of drip irrigation systems and in irrigation scheduling. The program performs computations based on analytical solutions of the relevant linearized water flow and uptake problems. Water flow is described by superposition of solutions for positive sources (on-surface or subsurface emitters) and negative sources (plant root systems). Steady water flow is assumed in the design module and unsteady flow is used in the irrigation scheduling module. The design tool is based on a new, relative water uptake rate (RWUR, ratio between water uptake rate and irrigation rate) criterion suggested for deciding upon the distances between emitters along drip lines and between drip lines. The maximum possible RWUR is evaluated assuming no soil-plant-atmosphere resistance to water uptake. Namely, the plant roots apply maximum possible suction and the water uptake is determined just by the capability of the soil to conduct water from the sources (emitters) to the sinks (rooting zones). The computations of the RWUR requires only a minimum number of three parameters describing the soil texture, the size of the root zone and the potential evaporation, in the few cases when it is important to account for also evaporation form the soil surface. The irrigation scheduling optimizing tool is based on a relative water uptake volume (RWUV, ratio between daily water uptake volume and daily irrigation volume) criterion. The computations of the diurnal patterns of the water uptake rates and the daily RWUV for a given irrigation scenario require additional information on the diurnal pattern of the plant resistance to water uptake and on the hydraulic conductivity of the soil. DIDAS includes also a module of quasi-steady flow for evaluating the diurnal water uptake patterns that accounts for the diurnal plant resistance and evaporation patterns and serves for fine-tuning of the design and preliminary evaluation of scheduling scenarios. DIDAS was programmed in DELPHI and it runs on any Windows operating system-PC, with no further software requirements. The construction of the drip irrigation scenario is performed via few GUI windows, which contain also a library of the required input parameters, and several best-fitting procedures. The simulated scenario of irrigation scheduling should include a sufficient number of irrigation cycles (larger for clayey as compared to sandy soils) for approaching a quasi-steady periodic pattern. The computed RWURs and RWUVs are displayed graphically and the tabulated output results can be exported to e.g. Windows Excel for further processing. A first version of the DIDAS software package can be soon downloaded from the web site of the Institute of Soil, Water and Environmental Sciences, ARO (http://www.agri.gov.il/en/units/institutes/6.aspx).

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics
See more from this Session: Soil Sensing for Crop Water Management: I