Crop growth and soil water balance modeling to explore water management options

Crop growth and soil water balance modeling to explore water management options
Author: Ines, A. V. M.Droogers, P.Makin, I. W.Das Gupta, A.
Publisher: IWMI
Total Pages: 35
Release: 2001
Genre: Crops
ISBN: 9290904585

The study was on the performance of the decision support system for agrotechnology transfer (DSSAT) and the soil water atmosphere plant (SWAP) under an acid sulphate soil. The comparison of these models was done as a prerequisite to the selection of an appropriate model, which is capable of simulating water management scenarios, water balance and crop growth, to be coupled with an adaptive optimization algorithm that can be used to explore water management options.

Simulation Model of the Water Balance of a Cropped Soil Providing Different Types of Boundary Conditions (SWATRE)

Simulation Model of the Water Balance of a Cropped Soil Providing Different Types of Boundary Conditions (SWATRE)
Author: C. Belmans
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1981
Genre:
ISBN:

In the present program, SWATRE(-xtended) the following types of conditions at the bottorn of the system can be used: - groundwater level; -flux from the saturated zone (prescribed); the groundwater level is computed; - flux from the saturated zone (calculated as the s~m of the flux towards ditches and the flux of deep percolation); the groundwater level is computed; - flux from the saturated zone (calculated with a flux - groundwater level relationship); the groundwater level is computed; - pressure head of bottorn compartment; - zero flux at the bottorn (of an unsaturated soil profile); i. e, when an impermeable layer is present; - free drainage at the bottorn (unit hydraulic gradient; unsaturated soil profile).

Understanding Options for Agricultural Production

Understanding Options for Agricultural Production
Author: G.Y. Tsuji
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 405
Release: 2013-03-14
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9401736243

The first premise of this book is that farmers need access to options for improving their situation. In agricultural terms, these options might be manage ment alternatives or different crops to grow, that can stabilize or increase household income, that reduce soil degradation and dependence on off-farm inputs, or that exploit local market opportunities. Farmers need a facilitating environment, in which affordable credit is available if needed, in which policies are conducive to judicious management of natural resources, and in which costs and prices of production are stable. Another key ingredient of this facilitating environment is information: an understanding of which options are viable, how these operate at the farm level, and what their impact may be on the things that farmers perceive as being important. The second premise is that systems analysis and simulation have an impor tant role to play in fostering this understanding of options, traditional field experimentation being time-consuming and costly. This book summarizes the activities of the International Benchmark Sites Network for Agrotechnology Transfer (IBSNAT) project, an international initiative funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). IBSNAT was an attempt to demonstrate the effectiveness of understanding options through systems analysis and simulation for the ultimate benefit of farm households in the tropics and subtropics. The idea for the book was first suggested at one of the last IBSNAT group meetings held at the University of Hawaii in 1993.