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21. The Institute Of Subtropical Plants And Olive Tree Of Chania
Study of the soil plant - water relationships and the plant defense Analysis of samples of irrigation water and recommendations for its use.
http://www.nagref-cha.gr/endocs/irrigation.html
Home General Info Olive Citrus ...
Plants
Irrigation and
Water Resources Hydroponics and
Aromatic Plants
Plant Physiology
and Nutrition
... Personnel
Irrigation and Water Resources
Objectives Laboratory equipment The main goals in the Irrigation and Water Resources involve: Studies on water requirements for the main crops, olive trees, citrus, avocados, kiwi and greenhouse vegetables. Evaluation and improvement of the new irrigation methods (drip, microsprinklers, etc.). Study of the soil - plant - water relationships and the plant defense mechanisms to drought. Development of the methodology for the application of consultative irrigation in practice. The evaluation and improvement of the technical and hydraulic characteristics of equipment and the materials of irrigation. Study on the use of low quality waters (saline water, reclaimed wastewaters) for irrigation and plant tolerarance to salinity. Water resources management in agriculture. Surveys on monitoring and combating desertification.

22. Soil Science - UserLogin
Root zone depth, over which soil water would be depleted to 0.50 of PAW during However, water was not available in the irrigation canal for the next
http://www.soilsci.com/pt/re/soilsci/fulltext.00010694-200501000-00004.htm
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23. Register Of Ecological Models: SWAP
soil water movement SWAP employs the Richards equation for soil water movementin the of three unsaturated soil water flow models. Agric. water manag.
http://dino.wiz.uni-kassel.de/model_db/mdb/swap.html
1. General Model Information
Name: Soil Water Atmosphere Plant
Acronym: SWAP
Main medium: terrestrial
Main subject: hydrology, biogeochemistry
Organization level: ecosystem
Type of model: partial differential equations (finite differences,1D)
Main application: research
Keywords: water management, crop production, solute transport, soil water flow,bypass flow,soil shrinkage,soil cracking, crack flow,preferential flow, hydraulic functions, hysteresis, heat dynamics, solute dynamics, evaporation, irrigation scheduling, drainage
Contact:
Ir. J.G. Wesseling
DLO Winand Staring Centre (SC-DLO)
Dept. of Agrohydrology
P.O.Box 125
6700 AC Wageningen
THE NETHERLANDS Phone: +31.317.474313 Fax : +31.317.424812 email: j.g.wesseling@sc.dlo.nl
Author(s):
Van Dam, J.C., J. Huygen, J.G. Wesseling R.A. Feddes , P. Kabat, P.E.V. van Walsum, P. Groenendijk, C.A. van Diepen
Abstract:
General SWAP (Soil, Water, Atmosphere and Plant) simulates vertical transport of water, solutes and heat in unsaturated/saturated soils. The program is designed to simulate the transport processes at field scale level and during entire growing seasons. Atmosphere Basic, daily meteorological data are used to calculate daily, potential evaporation according to Penman-Monteith. If basic meteorological data are not available, potential evaporation or reference evaporation can be input. Precipitation may be provided either at a daily basis or at actual intensities. Short-term rainfall data allow the calculation of runoff and preferential flow.

24. Register Of Ecological Models: SWIM
The retention coefficient depends on land use, soil type, soil water content andslope Technologies for manag. of Nat. Res. June 1719, Spokane,WA, USA.
http://dino.wiz.uni-kassel.de/model_db/mdb/swim.html
1. General Model Information
Name: Soil and Water Integrated Model
Acronym: SWIM
Main medium: terrestrial
Main subject: hydrology, biogeochemistry
Organization level: Ecosystem
Type of model: not specified
Main application: research
Keywords: watershed, basin scale, spatially distributed, runoff,groundwater, water quality, crop growth, nutrient cycling, nutrienttransport, erosion, sediment transport, climate change, land usechange, continuous-time, multiple subbasins, multiple hydrotops, threelevel spatial disaggregation, Priestley-Taylor evapotranspiration, modified Curve-Number-runoff,GIS, GRASS interface, soil database, SWAT
Contact:
Valentina Krysanova
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
P.O.Box 601203, Telegrafenberg
14412 Potsdam, Germany
Phone: +49-(0)331-288-2515
Fax: +49-(0)331-288-2600 email: valen@pik-potsdam.de
Author(s):
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research MATSALU-Modules: V. Krysanova, A. Meiner, J. Roosaare, A. Vasilyev, 1989, Estonian Ac. Sci.
Abstract:
Model Objectives: to simulate hydrological cycle, erosion, vegetation growth and nutrient transport in mesoscale watersheds (from 100 km2 to 20,000 km2); to analyse climate change and land use change impacts on hydrology and water quality at the regional scale.

25. JOURNAL ARTICLES
water use by alfalfa, corn and barley as influenced by available soil water. irrigation scheduling with saline water. Jour. of Farm Managers and Rural
http://weather.nmsu.edu/Teaching_Material/sammisres2.html
JOURNAL ARTICLES:
1. Ben-Asher, J., and T.W. Sammis. 1978. Radiation and energy balance of a trickle-irrigated lemon grove. Agro. Jour. Vol. 70, July and August 1978
2. Sammis, T.W. and Lloyd W. Gay. 1979. Evapotranspiration from an arid zone plant community. Jour. of Arid Environments 2:313-321.
3. Sammis, T.W. 1980. Comparison of sprinkler, trickle, subsurface, and furrow irrigation methods for
row crops. Agronomy Jour. Vol. 72, No. 5.
4. Sammis, T.W. 1981. Lysimeter for measuring arid zone evapotranspiration. Journal of Hydrology, 49:385-394.
5. Sammis, T.W. 1981. Yield of alfalfa and cotton as influenced by irrigation. Agronomy Jour., 73(2):323-329.
6. Abdul-Jabbar, A.S., T.W. Sammis, D.G. Lugg. 1982. Effect of moisture level on the root pattern of alfalfa.Irrigation Science 3:197-207.
7. Sammis, T.W., D.D. Evans and A.W. Warrick. 1982. Comparison of methods to estimate deep percolation rates. American Water Resources Assoc. Water Resources Bulletin, Vol. 18, No. 3.
8. Sammis, T.W., E.J. Gregory, and C.E. Kallsen. 1982. Estimating evapotranspiration with water-production functions of the Blaney-Criddle method. Transactions of the ASAE 25(6): 1656-1661.
9. Abdul-Jabbar, A.S., T.W. Sammis, D.G. Lugg, C.E. Kallsen, and D. Smeal. 1983. Water use by alfalfa, corn and barley as influenced by available soil water. Agricultural Water Management, 6:351-363.

26. CurrentCARCResearch
Yield and water useefficiency of eight wheat cultivars with seven dates in to reduce leaching in a shrink/swell clay soil. Ag. water manag. 54159-171.
http://ag.montana.edu/carc/journalarticles.htm
Selected Journal Articles
Chengci Chen
  • Chen, C., M. Westcott, K. Neill, D. Wichman, and M. Knox. 2004. Row configuration and nitrogen application for barley-pea intercropping in Montana. Agron. J. 96:1730-1738.
    Payne, W. A., C. Chen, and D. Ball. 2004. Agronomic potential of narrow-leafed and white lupins for the inland Pacific Northwest. Agron. J. 96:1501-1508.
    Chen, C, W.A. Payne, R.W. Smiley, and M.A. Stoltz. 2003. Yield and water use-efficiency of eight wheat cultivars with seven dates in northeastern Oregon. Agron. J. 95:836-843.
    Chen, C., R.J. Roseberg, and J.S. Selker. 2002. Using microsprinkler irrigation to reduce leaching in a shrink/swell clay soil. Ag. Water Manag. 54:159-171.
David Wichman
  • Berg, J.E., Bruckner, P.L., Kephart, K.D., Stougaard, R.N., Kushnak, G.D., Eckhoff, J.L., Carlson, G.R., Wichman , D.M., Riveland, N., Hockett, E.A. and Habernicht, D.K. 2003 Registration of ‘NuSky’ Wheat Crop Sci. 43: 736-737. Blake, T., Bowman, J.G.P., Hensleigh, P., Kushnak, G., Carlson, G., Welty, L., Eckhoff, J., Kephart, K., Wichman , D. and Hayes, P.M. 2003.

27. SWMRU Publications
soil water depletion yield relationships of irrigated sorhum, wheat, and soybeans.Trans. ASAE. J. Range manag. Vol. 37, No. 3, May 1984. pp. 211-217.
http://www.cprl.ars.usda.gov/wmru/wmpubs.htm
WWW Local
SWMRU Publications
Files in Adobe PDF format are available below for many of the publications listed. Also, reprints of these publications are available from the above address [attention Dr. Terry A. Howell] as long as reprint supplies last. Note, some reports and book chapters are not available. The latest version of the full manuscript will be sent in most cases (i.e., if an ASAE meeting paper or an abstract has been published only the final published version will be sent). GET the FREE Adobe Acrobat Reader Prior to 1976
Prior to 1976 (where PDF files are available)
Manuscript in Adobe format (15,584 kb).
1963. Taylor, H.M., C.E. Van Doren, C.L. Godfrey, and J.R. Coover, Soils of the Southwestern Great Plains Field Station. Texas Agric. Exp. Stn. Misc. Publ. MP-669. 12 pp. 1966. Hauser, V.L. Hydrology, Conservation, and Management of Runoff Water in Playas on the Southern High Plains. Conserv. Res. Rpt. 8, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. pp. 1-24.
Manuscript
in Adobe format (20,202 kb).
1973. Clark, R.N., and E.A. Hiler. Plant measurements as indicators of crop water deficit. Crop Sci. Vol. 13, p. 466-469. July-August 1973.

28. ScienceDirect - Geoderma : Assessing The Soil Quality Of Long-term Reclaimed Was
In irrigated soils, the Ca content may not be clearly distinguished, Analyzing field measured soil water properties. Agric. water manag. 6, pp. 93–109.
http://www.csufresno.edu/geology/Faculty&Staff/Wang/Publication/Wang et al 2003
Register or Login: Password: Quick Search: within All Full-text Sources Geoderma
Volume 114, Issues 3-4
, June 2003, Pages 261-278
The assessment of soil quality
This Document SummaryPlus Full Text + Links PDF (907 K) Actions Cited By Save as Citation Alert E-mail Article Export Citation ...
doi:10.1016/S0016-7061(03)00044-2
Cite or link using doi
Assessing the soil quality of long-term reclaimed wastewater-irrigated cropland
Z. Wang, A. C. Chang , L. Wu and D. Crowley
Department of Environmental Sciences, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA
Available online 7 February 2003.
Abstract
Author Keywords: Spatial variability; Soil quality; Spectral analysis; Principal component and factor analysis
Article Outline
1. Introduction
2. Materials and methods
2.1. Sites and samples
2.2. Soil attributes ...
References
1. Introduction
Historically, the quality of soil has been judged primarily on its suitability for an intended use Hillel, 1991

29. Texto. Suelos, Salinidad, Fertilidad, Maíz
soil salinity and plant nutritional status. Proc. Intern. Conf. manag. Saline Waterfor irrigation. Texas Tech. Univ. 199.
http://edafologia.ugr.es/Revista/tomo5/a29t.htm

30. Annual Reviews - Error
water use efficiency in irrigation districts. In Efficient water Use, ed. 19, Int. water manag. Inst., Colombo, Sri Lanka. 52. Gleick PH. ­ 1997.
http://arjournals.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev.energy.28.040202.122
An Error Occurred Setting Your User Cookie A cookie is a small amount of information that a web site copies onto your hard drive. Annual Reviews Online uses cookies to improve performance by remembering that you are logged in when you go from page to page. If the cookie cannot be set correctly, then Annual Reviews cannot determine whether you are logged in and a new session will be created for each page you visit. This slows the system down. Therefore, you must accept the Annual Reviews cookie to use the system. What Gets Stored in a Cookie? Annual Reviews Online only stores a session ID in the cookie, no other information is captured. In general, only the information that you provide, or the choices you make while visiting a web site, can be stored in a cookie. For example, the site cannot determine your email name unless you choose to type it. Allowing a web site to create a cookie does not give that or any other site access to the rest of your computer, and only the site that created the cookie can read it. Please read our for more information about data collected on this site.

31. Citations Of My Publications
Mathematical tools for irrigation water management An overview water INT 27 (1)47-57 MAR 2002 Field test of a soil water balance simulation model
http://civil.iisc.ernet.in/~nagesh/citations.htm
Citations of My Publications (Updated on 4th July 2005 Total Citations in International Journals: 49 An integrated model for optimal reservoir operation for irrigation of multiple crops
Vedula S, Nagesh Kumar D
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
32 (4): 1101-1108 APR 1996
Citations: 18
Vedula S, Mujumdar PP, Sekhar GC Conjunctive use modeling for multicrop irrigation AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT 73 (3): 193-221 MAY 16 2005 Azaiez MN Hariga M, Al- Harkan I A chance-constrained multi-period model for a special multi-reservoir system Suresh KR, Mujumdar PP A fuzzy risk approach for performance evaluation of an irrigation reservoir system AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT 69 (3): 159-177 OCT 1 2004 Satti SR, Jacobs JM, Irmak S Agricultural water management in a humid region: sensitivity to climate, soil and crop parameters AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT 70 (1): 51-65 OCT 15 2004 Raju KS , Kumar DN Irrigation planning using Genetic Algorithms WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT 18 (2): 163-176 APR 2004 Jairaj PG, Vedula S Modeling reservoir irrigation in uncertain hydrologic environment
J IRRIG DRAIN ENGG-ASCE 129 (3): 164-172 MAY-JUN 2003 Cai XM

32. Estimation Of Winter Wheat Evapotranspiration Under Water Stress With Two Semiem
soil water and ET estimates for a wide range of rainfed and irrigated conditions . water manag. 4951–63. Wang, HX, L. Zhang, WR Dawes, and CM Liu. 2001.
http://agron.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/96/1/159
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PubMed Articles by Zhang, Y. Articles by Zhang, X. Agricola Articles by Zhang, Y. Articles by Zhang, X. Related Collections Water Stress
Evapotranspiration

Evapotranspiration Models

Agroclimatology
...
Wheat
Published in Agron. J. 96:159-168 (2004).
American Society of Agronomy

677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
WHEAT
Estimation of Winter Wheat Evapotranspiration under Water Stress with Two Semiempirical Approaches
Yongqiang Zhang ,a ,b Qiang Yu a Changming Liu a Jie Jiang c and Xiying Zhang a ,b a Luancheng Agroecosyst. Stn., Inst. of Geogr. Sci. and Nat. Resour. Res., Chinese Acad. of Sci., Bldg. 917, Datun Rd., Beijing 100101, China b Xiying Zhang, Shijiazhuang Inst. of Agric. Modernization, Chinese Acad. of Sci., 286 Huaizhong Rd., Shijiazhuang 050021, P.R. China

33. Cited References: Kalfountzos D
(2001), irrigation water saving and yield increase with subsurface drip (2002), ‘soil water status and water yield relationships for cotton and maize’,
http://www.ath.aegean.gr/srcosmos/generic_pinakas.aspx?pinakas=cited_refs&alphar

34. Cited References: Kalfountzos D
(2002), ‘soil water status and water yield relationships for cotton and maize’, (2001), irrigation water saving and yield increase with subsurface drip
http://www.ath.aegean.gr/srcosmos/generic_pinakas.aspx?pinakas=cited_refs&alphar

35. Salt Tolerance In Relation To Ploidy Level In Guayule
Salinity of irrigation water has been reported to decrease rubber yield and Agr. water manag. 10205219. Miyamoto, S., K. Piela, J. Davis, and LG Fenn.
http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/proceedings1993/v2-349.html
Index Search Home Table of Contents Estilai, A. and M.C. Shannon. 1993. Salt tolerance in relation to ploidy level in guayule. p. 349-351. In: J. Janick and J.E. Simon (eds.), New crops. Wiley, New York.
Salt Tolerance in Relation to Ploidy Level in Guayule
Ali Estilai and Michael C. Shannon
  • METHODOLOGY
  • RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
  • FUTURE PROSPECTS
  • REFERENCES ...
  • Table 1 Guayule ( Parthenium argentatum Gray) is a promising alternative to rubber tree ( Hevea brasiliensis Muel. Arg.) for production of natural rubber in semiarid regions of the world. For the United States, which is totally dependent on foreign sources of natural rubber, developing guayule as a commercial crop should be a high priority. A domestic source of natural rubber is vital to our national defense and helps balance the budget by reducing the one billion dollars spent annually for the imports of Hevea rubber from southeast Asia. Salt-tolerant guayule cultivars are needed for economic production of rubber on marginal lands and in areas with low quality saline water. The available guayule germplasm which is being used to develop new guayule cultivars are 2 n = 36, 54, or 72 (Bergner 1944, 1946; Stebbins and Kodani 1944). Plants with 2
  • 36. NUI Galway, Engineering Hydrology
    soil and water conservation policies in the Czech Republic. In soil and waterConservation Successes manag. Symp. At Davis, California, April 2000.
    http://www.nuigalway.ie/faculties_departments/hydrology/publications_conference_
    Home Engineering Hydrology Engineering Hydrology Welcome Staff Teaching Consultancy ... Links Refereed Conference Papers
    Cawley, A.M. and Kennan D.M. (1993). "Mathematical Modelling – An Effective Approach to Planning and Environmental Management for the Mariculture Industry", I.C.E.S., Statutory Meeting, Dublin, C.M. 1993/F: 21. 5th International Conference on Hydraulic Eng Software, Hydrosoft 94, Porto Carro, Greece (September 1994). Publ. in Hydraulic Engineering Software V, Vol. I, Water Resources and Distribution, eds. Farrell K. and Cawley, A.M. (1996). Hydrographic Tracking and Oil Weathering Model for Emergency Response in the Shannon Estuary, Ireland, Irish Marine Science 1995 Symposium, Galway University Press Ltd. 1996. Tan, B.Q., O’Connor, K.M. and Z.C. Liu (1996). Application of a distributed form of the SMAR model. Proceedings of the October 29 - 31, Kyoto, Japan (at Heian Kaikan), Vol. 1 , pp. 46 - 52. Dolezal, F., Lipavsky, J. Kren, J., Novak, P., Simon, J., Kubat, J., Pycha, M., Cikanova, S. Klimova, P., Flasarova, V., Pokorny, E., (1998): The use of crop models for land valuation. In: "Multiple Objective Decision Making for Land, Water and Environmental Management", ed. by S. A. El-Swaify and D. S. Yakowitz, Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, FL, USA

    37. Mount Lofty Ranges Catchment Program
    Catchment water manag t boards. Freight (livestock). Community resource centres.Hay silage making irrigation systems (see water). Local government
    http://www.mlrcp.sa.gov.au/farmsupplies.htm
    FARM SUPPLIES, CONTRACTORS, INFORMATION Welcome to the Mount Lofty Ranges Small Holdings Directory The Mount Lofty Ranges Small Holdings Directory, prepared by the Southern, Central and Northern Hills Soil Conservation Boards , helps landholders find the services they might need to manage their properties successfully and sustainably. Small Holdings Directory Contents
    Questions to consider before starting a job ANIMAL (not horse) FARM HOUSE Breeding Alternative Energy Concrete Contractor Dog obedience Farm butchering Health Gates Insurance Mud bricks Nutrition Recycling Welfare ( see also Veterinary) Rubbish removal Septic cleaning ASSOCIATIONS Sheds Ag Bureau Soil-testing (physical) Animal (not horse) Slow combustion stoves Environmental Stone masonry Horse Tank cleaning Horticulture Tanks Organic production SA Farmers Federation HORSE Agistment EARTH MOVING Breakers Dam building Dentists Earth movers Farriers Trenching Float hire Float repairs
    CONTRACTORS / SERVICES
    Riding lessons Advisers / Consultants Saddlery Cold storage INFORMATION Fencing Agencies (government) Fertiliser spreading Catchment water manag't boards Freight (livestock) Community resource centres Fire prevention officers Irrigation systems

    38. EEAD - Optimising Production Techniques In Agricultural Systems
    of infiltration and available soil water on irrigation performance. Sprinkler irrigation allows to reduce the volume of irrigation water,
    http://www.eead.csic.es/en/lineas_investigacion/07_optimizacion_tecnicas.html
    Optimising Production Techniques in Agricultural Systems
    Weighing lysimenter and agrometeorological weather station on a rice field
    The Ador software for the management of Irrigation Districts
    Research is performed to crop rice using less water, improving the traditional cropping systems and evaluating growing rice under sprinkler irrigation Department: Genetics and Plant Production
    CURRENT RESEARCH LINES:
    1. Agrometeorology and crop water requirements
    macoan@eead.csic.es 1.1. Micrometeorology Study of the energy balance: latent, sensible and soil heat fluxes, and net radiation. Cropped and natural surfaces. Time scales: half hour to one hour. a. Analysis of the effect of different meteorological conditions on these micrometeorological processes. b. Evaluation of micrometeorological methods for measurement of crop evapotranspiration, focusing on eddy covariance and surface renewal. Other micrometeorological techniques. 1.2. Measurement and estimation of evapotranspiration of different crops and natural surfaces Time scale: half hour to daily.

    39. Royal Society Briefing: Land Resources
    The amount of water available to plants, from rain or from irrigation; If there is plenty of water but the soil is poor, nutrients are said to be
    http://www.poptel.org.uk/nuj/mike/rs-pop.htm
    Land Resources:
    on the edge of the Malthusian precipice?
    A briefing document prepared for the Royal Society and Association of British Science Writers by Mike Holderness On 4 and 5 December 1996, the Royal Society held a scientific meeting entitled "Land Resources: on the edge of the Malthusian precipice?" This document was prepared afterwards to summarize key issues raised by the speakers and to provide a list of helpful contacts for future reference. March 1997 There are two ways of looking at the Malthusian precipice: as an edge over which we can rush like the Gadarene Swine into the abyss; or as the heights which we are climbing, rather successfully so far. From the introduction by the Chair
    SUMMARY
    How hungry will our children be? How many people will there be in the world by, say, 2050? How much food will they be able to grow, for how much longer after that and at what cost? In 1798 the English clergyman Thomas Malthus published his Essay on the Principle of Population . He noted that population rises geometrically. That is, if 10 people occupy a tiny island and each generation has twice as many members as the last, succeeding generations will have 20, 40, 80, 160, 320... members. He suggested that food production can only rise arithmetically: each generation may have the capacity to feed 100, 120, 140, 160, 180, 200... people. The fifth generation of our islanders reach the "Malthusian Precipice". "The power of population is so superior to the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man," Malthus concluded, "that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race."

    40. Blackwell Synergy - Cookie Absent
    The field capacity, permanent wilting point and bulk density of soil are 19.5%, under a range of irrigated treatments.Agric. water manag.17,95 115.
    http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.1439-037x.2000.00404.x
     Home An Error Occurred Setting Your User Cookie A cookie is a small amount of information that a web site copies onto your hard drive. Synergy uses cookies to improve performance by remembering that you are logged in when you go from page to page. If the cookie cannot be set correctly, then Synergy cannot determine whether you are logged in and a new session will be created for each page you visit. This slows the system down. Therefore, you must accept the Synergy cookie to use the system. What Gets Stored in a Cookie? Synergy only stores a session ID in the cookie, no other information is captured. In general, only the information that you provide, or the choices you make while visiting a web site, can be stored in a cookie. For example, the site cannot determine your email name unless you choose to type it. Allowing a web site to create a cookie does not give that or any other site access to the rest of your computer, and only the site that created the cookie can read it. Please read our for more information about data collected on this site.

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