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First- and second-generation agrometeorological models for the prairies and simulated water-demand for potatoes
Author(s) -
R. L. Raddatz,
G. H. B. Ash,
C. F. Shaykewich,
K. A. Roberge,
Justin Graham
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
canadian journal of soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.592
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1918-1841
pISSN - 0008-4271
DOI - 10.4141/cjss96-036
Subject(s) - evapotranspiration , environmental science , crop coefficient , hydrology (agriculture) , soil water , atmospheric sciences , water balance , water content , crop , phenology , transpiration , vapour pressure deficit , water use , dns root zone , biometeorology , vegetation (pathology) , canopy , soil science , agronomy , geography , geology , forestry , ecology , medicine , photosynthesis , geotechnical engineering , botany , pathology , archaeology , biology
On the Canadian prairies, moisture is usually the limiting factor in crop production. Occasionally, the thermal regime limits yields. At the Winnipeg Climate Centre, Environment Canada, a root-zone water-balance model simulates crop development, water-demand and water-use with daily climatological observations from across the agricultural portion of the Canadian Prairie Provinces. Simulations are used for regional-scale monitoring of the prairie’s major crops (spring wheat, barley and canola) and they have been used to quantify climatological risks. This agrometeorological model is termed a first-generation model as potential evapotranspiration is estimated empirically from Baier and Robertson’s simplest regression equation.A coupled atmosphere-crop-soil agrometeorological model has also been developed for crop monitoring on the prairies. This model generates atmospheric boundary layer profiles at climatological-sites using upper-air analyses and surface characteristics. The crop-soil boundary layer consists of the growing crop, and the top, root and sub-zones of the soil. Evapotranspiration is calculated deterministically from the air’s water vapour density deficit. The calculation is modulated by aerodynamic, canopy and soil resistances. The coupled approach is termed a second-generation model.The re-formulation of the coupled model to simulate the phenology and water-demand of a newly significant crop, potatoes, is described. Comparison with 1994 and 1995 test-plot observations of fractional leaf area and rooting depth suggests that the potato phenology simulation requires further development. Estimates of daily crop water-demand are similar but show greater day-today variation than values generated by a first-generation Baier and Robertson procedure. Key words: Regional modelling, soil moisture, phenology, crop water-demand, potatoes

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