Monitoring Irrigation in Small Orchards with Cosmic-Ray Neutron Sensors

Author:

Brogi Cosimo1ORCID,Pisinaras Vassilios2ORCID,Köhli Markus3ORCID,Dombrowski Olga1,Hendricks Franssen Harrie-Jan1ORCID,Babakos Konstantinos2,Chatzi Anna2ORCID,Panagopoulos Andreas2ORCID,Bogena Heye Reemt1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Agrosphere Institute (IBG-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, 52425 Jülich, Germany

2. Soil & Water Resources Institute, Hellenic Agricultural Organization, Gorgopotamou, Sindos, 57400 Thessaloniki, Greece

3. Physikalisches Institut, Heidelberg University, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Due to their unique characteristics, cosmic-ray neutron sensors (CRNSs) have potential in monitoring and informing irrigation management, and thus optimising the use of water resources in agriculture. However, practical methods to monitor small, irrigated fields with CRNSs are currently not available and the challenges of targeting areas smaller than the CRNS sensing volume are mostly unaddressed. In this study, CRNSs are used to continuously monitor soil moisture (SM) dynamics in two irrigated apple orchards (Agia, Greece) of ~1.2 ha. The CRNS-derived SM was compared to a reference SM obtained by weighting a dense sensor network. In the 2021 irrigation period, CRNSs could only capture the timing of irrigation events, and an ad hoc calibration resulted in improvements only in the hours before irrigation (RMSE between 0.020 and 0.035). In 2022, a correction based on neutron transport simulations, and on SM measurements from a non-irrigated location, was tested. In the nearby irrigated field, the proposed correction improved the CRNS-derived SM (from 0.052 to 0.031 RMSE) and, most importantly, allowed for monitoring the magnitude of SM dynamics that are due to irrigation. The results are a step forward in using CRNSs as a decision support system in irrigation management.

Funder

ATLAS project

Cosmic Sense

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Biochemistry,Instrumentation,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Analytical Chemistry

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