Citation Information

  • Title : High-yield irrigated maize in the Western U.S. Corn Belt: II. Irrigation management and crop water productivity.
  • Source : Field Crops Research
  • Publisher : Elsevier
  • Volume : 120
  • Issue : 1
  • Pages : 133–141
  • Year : 2011
  • DOI : 10.1016/j.fcr.20
  • ISBN : 10.1016/j.fcr.2010.09.013
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Burr, C.
    • Thorburn, J.
    • Irmak, S.
    • Yang, H. S.
    • Grassini, P.
    • Cassman, K. G.
  • Climates: Steppe (BSh, BSk).
  • Cropping Systems: Maize. Irrigated cropping systems. Soybean. Conservation cropping systems. Conventional cropping systems. No-till cropping systems. Till cropping systems.
  • Countries: USA.

Summary

Appropriate benchmarks for water productivity (WP), defined here as the amount of grain yield produced per unit of water supply, are needed to help identify and diagnose inefficiencies in crop production and water management in irrigated systems. Such analysis is lacking for maize in the Western U.S. Corn Belt where irrigated production represents 58% of total maize output. The objective of this paper was to quantify WP and identify opportunities to increase it in irrigated maize systems of central Nebraska. In the present study, a benchmark for maize WP was (i) developed from relationships between simulated yield and seasonal water supply (stored soil water and sowing-to-maturity rainfall plus irrigation) documented in a previous study; (ii) validated against actual data from crops grown with good management over a wide range of environments and water supply regimes ( n=123); and (iii) used to evaluate WP of farmer's fields in central Nebraska using a 3-y database (2005-2007) that included field-specific values for yield and applied irrigation ( n=777). The database was also used to quantify applied irrigation, irrigation water-use efficiency (IWUE; amount of yield produced per unit of applied irrigation), and the impact of agronomic practices on both parameters. Opportunities to improve irrigation management were evaluated using a maize simulation model in combination with actual weather records and detailed data on soil properties and crop management collected from a subset of fields ( n=123). The linear function derived from the relationship between simulated grain yield and seasonal water supply, namely the mean WP function (slope=19.3 kg ha -1 mm -1; x-intercept=100 mm), proved to be a robust benchmark for maize WP when compared with actual yield and water supply data. Average farmer's WP in central Nebraska was ~73% of the WP derived from the slope of the mean WP function. A substantial number of fields (55% of total) had water supply in excess of that required to achieve yield potential (900 mm). Pivot irrigation (instead of surface irrigation) and conservation tillage in fields under soybean-maize rotation had the greatest IWUE and yield. Applied irrigation was 41 and 20% less under pivot and conservation tillage than under surface irrigation and conventional tillage, respectively. Simulation analysis showed that up to 32% of the annual water volume allocated to irrigated maize in the region could be saved with little yield penalty, by switching current surface systems to pivot, improving irrigation schedules to be more synchronous with crop water requirements and, as a fine-tune option, adopting limited irrigation.

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