Irrigation Journal Spring 2020

Page 22

SMART IRRIGATION FEATURE Irrigation scheduling options: pros and cons With the advent of cloud technology, the ability to adopt irrigation sensor hardware has never been greater. Combined with new sensor development, analytics and satellites, this provides irrigators with great opportunities to drive agribusiness production improvements through smart irrigation scheduling. There are four main methods used to schedule irrigation: climate-based, soil moisture monitoring, remote sensing and plant sensors. In this article, Tim Hyde from SWAN Systems takes us through some of the pros and cons of each type.

PLANT SENSORS The latest trend is plant-based sensors, which have been available for some time but have only recently started to become a more complete system for irrigation scheduling. Plant-based sensors include sap flow, dendrometers and canopy temperatures. ✔These sensors are good at letting a manager know exactly what is going on with the plant. ✘ They face the same issues as with in-field hardware such as breakage, sample size and interpretation for accurate management insights.

CLIMATE-BASED SCHEDULING Climate-based scheduling determines daily evapotranspiration and multiplies this by the crop coefficient for a crop at a particular growth stage. ✔ Pre-determined crop co-efficients are publicly available and used as the benchmark for many irrigated industries. ✘ Small differences like varieties, rootstocks, crop load, soil type and root depth can have a dramatic effect on the water requirements of a crop.

SOIL MOISTURE MONITORING Soil moisture probes (e.g. tensiometers, gypsum blocks and capacitance probes) have been available for more than 30 years. ✔They are a low-cost and widely used way of getting a better understanding of what the plant is doing via the soil medium. The recent migration of most data to the cloud has allowed for easy and relatively cheap monitoring of the soil moisture balance in irrigated crops. ✘ In-field hardware often gets broken, batteries go flat or they are not calibrated/installed correctly (and thus don’t represent the true soil moisture balance of a particular site). The trends are very consistent with modelling, but the numbers are then of little use, as they don’t represent what is actually going on in the soil.

REMOTE SENSING Satellite/remote sensing irrigation scheduling is relatively new. While there are great opportunities, its best use is as a part of the irrigation management suite. The main reason for this is that, unless crop specific details are known, then aspects like drainage and runoff cannot be modelled or fully appreciated in calculations. ✔This technology offers great opportunities, as it is easy to implement and low cost. ✘ The main issues are infrequent captures and poor image quality as a result of cloud cover.

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Sap flow monitoring is being used with tree crops such as macadamias to schedule irrigation. Photo courtesy Australian Macadamia Society News Bulletin.

MATCHING TECHNOLOGY TO BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEM THE KEY The options for irrigation scheduling vary a lot - and these options may or may not suit different crops, regions and management systems. Importantly, all systems provide valuable insights that can (and should, where practicable) be combined to provide a clearer picture of plant water requirements. Within the confines of budget and management system, the aim is to combine technology to derive as much meaningful information as possible, e.g. soil moisture monitoring, satellite imagery and plant-based sensor data, so that accurate decisions can be made. Having a clearer understanding of all this data and combining it with weather forecast information, will give users access to the most reliable and accurate irrigation scheduling tool available. Tim Hyde, CEO SWAN Systems


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Bookshelf

2min
page 50

New Products

7min
pages 51-54

ICID Insights

3min
page 49

Business Feature

2min
page 48

How water is used in the Murray-Darling Basin

4min
pages 46-47

Murray-Darling Basin water markets in need of major changes

4min
pages 44-45

Calculating Readily Available Water

5min
pages 40-41

Professional Development

3min
pages 42-43

State Roundup

1min
page 37

Contractors' Corner

4min
pages 38-39

Future-proofing Western Australia’s south-west

9min
pages 34-36

Around Industry

6min
pages 30-31

Waterway health and urban design

5min
pages 28-29

The Big Issue

4min
pages 32-33

Rainwater Harvesting Australia looking to consolidate achievements in 2020-21

2min
page 27

IAL News

11min
pages 23-26

Precision agriculture shows promise for vegetable production

5min
pages 20-21

Irrigation scheduling options: pros and cons

2min
page 22

Technology: Rural

4min
pages 10-11

SMART IRRIGATION FEATURE

3min
pages 18-19

Pumping system supplies farm’s water needs

4min
pages 14-17

Chairman's Message

2min
page 5

Research

5min
pages 12-13

Technology: Urban

2min
page 8

From the CEO

2min
pages 6-7

FEATURE ARTICLES

2min
page 9
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