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OVERSEER® Nutrient budgets and Irrigation. David Wheeler 1 , John Bright 2 1 AgResearch, Hamilton 2 Aqualinc, Christchurch. Background. Overseer is a nutrient management tool Drainage is an important driver of leaching Irrigation inputs accounted for in the drainage calculation
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OVERSEER® Nutrient budgets and Irrigation David Wheeler1, John Bright2 1AgResearch, Hamilton 2Aqualinc, Christchurch
Background • Overseer is a nutrient management tool • Drainage is an important driver of leaching • Irrigation inputs accounted for in the drainage calculation • Concerns about use of irrigation in Overseer • Aligning irrigation inputs to climate data inputs • Type of management options within Overseer
Drainage model • Each day: • SMt = SMt-1 + rainfall + irrigation • – AET – drainage – runoff • Drainage occurs when soils exceed field capacity • The amount and timing of irrigation can affect drainage • Climate data determines rainfall pattern, potential evapotranspiration
INPUTTING irrigation data into OVS ‘Method only’ ‘Method plus rate’
USING ‘Method only’ • Overseer automatically calculates the irrigation amount required to maintain high soil moisture content while minimising drainage Saturation Irrigation Field capacity 0.95 Target 0.70 Trigger AWC Wilting point
USING ‘Method only’ • Includes an estimate of ‘system losses’ • Losses due to leaks, overlaps, inefficiencies, etc • Added to drainage • Border dyke also includes outwash loss Active management check box • Calculation then based on: • No system losses assumed • No irrigation applied within 5 days of rainfall Requires nutrient concentrations in water • Border dyke outwash can be recycled
USING ‘Method plus rate’ • A three step process: • Irrigation amount estimated as per ‘method only’ • Applied rate estimated from user-entered rate data • If estimated applied rate > method only rate • Difference added to drainage ESSENTIAL that entered rate and climate data align
Climate data • User inputs to describe climate are: • Annual rainfall • Annual PET • Annual average temperature • Default PET and temperature based on long-term climate data set • User can define period annual data is average of, but • Data must be commensurate with the objectives of setting up the Overseer file, and with management input data
Climate patterns • Overseer climate database uses a ‘typical’ distribution of rainfall, PET and temperature: • Currently typical long-term patterns • Moving to site-specific long-term patterns • Important to align climate and irrigation rates Illustration of long-term average rainfall patterns and variation with a single year
New work underway • The following projects will add robustness to the use of irrigation in Overseer: • Comparison of drainage estimates under irrigation between Overseer and IrriCalc • Also looking into additional management options to describe irrigation use • Improving supporting databases: • Soil data • Default climate data
Irrigation Management • Test bed
EFFECT of Management rules on calculated drainage 800 mm rainfall, irrigated October to February central pivot Tentative * Estimated irrigation rate (mm/yr) ** Estimated drainage (mm/yr)
Conclusions • Recommend use ‘method only’ for now • This leaves Overseer to estimate the irrigation rate • Minimises the risk of not aligning irrigation rate and rainfall • If using ‘method plus rate’, then align climate and irrigation rate • Not recommended • Using this option may lead to an overestimation of drainage • Irrigation management rules are important • Investigating how to increase range of rules in Overseer • Look out for further updates • As we work through the results of the Irricalc comparison project
Acknowledgments • OVERSEER® owners are Ministry for Primary Industries, Fertiliser Association of New Zealand and AgResearch