Agricultural Water Conservation: Tools, Strategies, and Practices

A topical collection in Agronomy (ISSN 2073-4395). This collection belongs to the section "Water Use and Irrigation".

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Editor


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Guest Editor
UC Cooperative Extension Imperial County, University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, 1050 East Holton Road, Holtville, CA 92250, USA
Interests: agricultural water management; drainage and water quality; salinity management and control practices; environmental instrumentation and modeling
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

Topical Collection Information

Dear Colleagues,

Drought and climate change have decreased water availability for agriculture in arid and semiarid regions; hence, efficiency enhancement in irrigation water management aimed at conserving water is the key to adjust to the limits in water supply, as well as improve the profitability and sustainability of agricultural production. Agricultural water management tools and practices that reduce water use with acceptable impacts on crop production encompass viable strategies required to cope with diminished water supplies and generate new sources of irrigation water.

This Special Issue aims to bring together a collection of recent research and advancements in agricultural water conservation. It intends to give a broad overview focusing on on-farm water conservation practices, advanced irrigation tools and water technologies, irrigation decision support systems and precision irrigation, and best management practices and strategies for efficient water use in agriculture. Case studies and review papers which assess the current water management challenges and offer opportunities and potential actions for the improvement of future agricultural water conservation are welcome.

Dr. Aliasghar Montazar
Guest Editor

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • agriculture
  • decision support system
  • efficient water use
  • irrigation management
  • water conservation

Published Papers (1 paper)

2024

28 pages, 412 KiB  
Review
A Review of Methods for Data-Driven Irrigation in Modern Agricultural Systems
by Matthew Jenkins and David E. Block
Agronomy 2024, 14(7), 1355; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy14071355 - 22 Jun 2024
Viewed by 1384
Abstract
More than half of global water use can be attributed to crop irrigation, and as the human population grows, so will the water requirements of agriculture. Improved irrigation will be critical to mitigating the impact of increased requirements. An ideal irrigation system is [...] Read more.
More than half of global water use can be attributed to crop irrigation, and as the human population grows, so will the water requirements of agriculture. Improved irrigation will be critical to mitigating the impact of increased requirements. An ideal irrigation system is informed by measurements of water demand—a combination of water use and water status signals—and delivers water to plants based on this demand. In this review, examples of methods for monitoring water status are reviewed, along with details on stem and trunk water potential measurements. Then, methods for monitoring evapotranspiration (ET), or water use, are described. These methods are broken into coarse- and fine-scale categories, with a 10 m spatial resolution threshold between them. Fourteen crop ET technologies are presented, including examples of a successful estimation of ET in research and field settings, as well as limitations. The focus then shifts to water distribution technologies, with an emphasis on the challenges associated with the development of systems that achieve dynamic single plant resolution. Some attention is given to the process of choosing ET and water status sensing methods as well as water delivery system design given site characteristics and agronomic goals. This review concludes with a short discussion on the future directions of ET research and the importance of translating findings into useful tools for growers. Full article
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