Author:
Asseng S.,Dunin F. X.,Fillery I. R. P.,Tennant D.,Keating B. A.
Abstract
High rates of deep drainage in Western Australia are contributing to
groundwater recharge and secondary salinity. Strategies are being sought to
increase water use in cropping systems and to reduce deep drainage.
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, and in particular the inherent seasonal variability.
Simulation models can provide the appropriate means to extrapolate across time
and space. The Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM) was used to
explore the effect of alternative agronomic practices on wheat production and
deep drainage for representative soils and rainfall regions of the central
wheatbelt of Western Australia. Soil water profiles were reset each year to
the lower limit of plant-available water, assuming maximum water use in the
previous crop. The long-term simulation studies showed that management
practices with N fertiliser directed at yield increase were most effective in
achieving these aims in the medium to high rainfall regions. The corresponding
effect for drainage reduction was marginal. The small effect on drainage
control associated with production increase can be traced to the effect of
rainfall distribution with major occurrences of both rainfall and drainage
during winter (June–August) coinciding with the lowest potential
atmospheric demand for evapotranspiration, in combination with low
water-holding capacity soils. Nitrogen-induced increases in crop transpiration
were in conjunction with reduced soil evaporation, which increased water use
efficiency and occurred mostly after the main drainage period, but had little
effect on deep drainage within the season. Similar outcomes of enhanced
productivity with minor impact on deep drainage were noted with crops sown at
different times and with a hypothetical wheat crop having a deeper rooting
system.
Simulations without resetting soil water each year enabled the quantification
of potential carryover effects on long-term average deep drainage. The
carry-over of soil water left behind at crop harvest reduced the water storage
capacity of the soil in a subsequent year and could increase long-term deep
drainage substantially, depending on soil type. Improved management increased
late water use in the high rainfall region, in particular on better
water-holding soils, and could largely reduce this carry-over effect.
The current wheat-based cropping systems, even with alternative management
practices, continue to be a major threat to sustainability on the low
water-holding soils in the wheatbelt of Western Australia, as a main cause of
secondary salinity.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
48 articles.
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