Author:
Asseng S.,Fillery I. R. P.,Dunin F. X.,Keating B. A.,Meinke H.
Abstract
High rates of deep drainage (water loss below the root-zone) in Western
Australia are contributing to groundwater recharge and secondary salinity.
However, quantifying potential drainage through measurements is hampered by
the high degree of complexity of these systems as a result of diverse soil
types, a range of crops, different rainfall regions, and in particular the
inherent season-to-season variability. Simulation models can provide the
appropriate means to extrapolate across time and space. The Agricultural
Production Systems Simulator (APSIM) was used to analyse deep drainage under
wheat crops in the Mediterranean climate of the central Western Australian
wheatbelt. In addition to rigorous model testing elsewhere, comparisons
between simulated and observed soil water loss, evapotranspiration, and deep
drainage for different soil types and seasons confirmed the reasonable
performance of the APSIM model.
The APSIM model was run with historical weather records (70–90 years)
across 2 transects from the coast (high rainfall zone) to the eastern edge of
the wheatbelt (low rainfall zone). Soils were classified as 5 major types:
deep sand, deep loamy sand, acid loamy sand, shallow duplex (waterlogging),
and clay soil (non-waterlogging). Simulations were carried out on these soil
types with historical weather records, assuming current crop management and
cultivars. Soil water profiles were reset each year to the lower limit of
plant-available water, assuming maximum water use in the previous crop.
Results stressed the high degree of seasonal variability of deep drainage
ranging from 0 to 386 mm at Moora in the high rainfall region (461 mm/year
average rainfall), from 0 to 296 mm at Wongan Hills in the medium rainfall
region (386 mm/year average rainfall), and from 0 to 234 mm at Merredin in
the low rainfall region (310 mm/year average rainfall). The largest
amounts of drainage occurred in soils with lowest extractable water-holding
capacities. Estimates of annual drainage varied with soil type and location.
For example, average (s.d.) annual drainage at Moora, Wongan Hills, and
Merredin was 134 (73), 90 (61), and 36 (43) mm on a sand, and 57 (64), 26
(43), and 4 (18) mm on a clay soil, respectively. These values are an order of
magnitude higher than drainage reported elsewhere under native vegetation.
When not resetting the soil each year, carry-over of water left behind in the
soil reduced the water storage capacity in the subsequent year, increasing
long-term average deep drainage, depending on soil type and rainfall region.
The analyses revealed the extent of the excess water problem that currently
threatens the sustainability of the wheat-based farming systems in Western
Australia.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences