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Beyond 2020, Vision of the Future: Selected Papers from the Sixth Decennial National Irrigation Symposium
Author(s) -
Freddie R. Lamm,
Michael D. Dukes,
K. C. Stone,
B. Mecham
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
transactions of the asabe
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.396
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 2151-0040
pISSN - 2151-0032
DOI - 10.13031/trans.14574
Subject(s) - irrigation , irrigation management , water resource management , irrigation statistics , water resources , evapotranspiration , agricultural economics , deficit irrigation , geography , environmental science , agronomy , economics , ecology , biology
HighlightsASABE/IA 6th National Irrigation Symposium includes 80 papers, with 36 introduced here in this Special Collection. Papers include current irrigation research about ET, management, turf systems, technology, humid region, water supply. Irrigation in the U.S. is growing more rapidly in humid regions, and pressurized irrigation continues to grow in usage. There has been much progress in irrigation science in the last decade, and the vision of the future looks bright.Abstract . This article introduces the ASABE Special Collection associated with the 6th Decennial National Irrigation Symposium: Beyond 2020, Vision of the Future. This U.S. symposium, jointly sponsored by ASABE and the Irrigation Association in December 2021, was postponed from 2020 due to the pandemic and consists of approximately 80 presentations, of which 36 were accepted as journal articles for this Special Collection. Irrigated land area appears to be growing slightly in the U.S. but is shifting geographically somewhat toward humid regions. Pressurized irrigation continues to grow, and gravity-fed irrigation continues to decline. Competition for stressed water resources among diverse water users remains great, and smaller numbers of irrigation scientists are available to meet the informational needs. Improved ability to acquire, assess, and use water and crop information helps to meet these challenges. This article discusses irrigation research progress in evapotranspiration (ET), irrigation management, turf systems, sensors and technologies, irrigation strategies in the humid region, and water supply. Challenges and opportunities continue to exist for irrigation in the U.S., but progress in the last decade has been steady, and a good vision for the future of irrigation beyond 2020 is anticipated. Keywords: Evapotranspiration, Irrigation, Irrigation management, Irrigation scheduling, Irrigation systems, Turf and landscape irrigation.

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