An integrated crop and hydrologic modeling system to estimate hydrologic impacts of crop irrigation demands

被引:43
|
作者
McNider, R. T. [1 ]
Handyside, C. [1 ]
Doty, K. [1 ]
Ellenburg, W. L. [1 ]
Cruise, J. F. [1 ]
Christy, J. R. [1 ]
Moss, D. [1 ]
Sharda, V. [2 ]
Hoogenboom, G. [2 ]
Caldwell, Peter [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alabama, Ctr Earth Syst Sci, Huntsville, AL 35899 USA
[2] Washington State Univ, AgWeatherNet, Prosser, WA 99350 USA
[3] US Natl Forest Serv, Coweta, GA USA
关键词
Agriculture; Hydrology; Drought; Crop modeling; Hydrology modeling; CERES-MAIZE MODEL; CLIMATE-CHANGE; WATER-RESOURCES; UNITED-STATES; YIELD; INFORMATION; SIMULATION; INSOLATION; FRAMEWORK; PROGRAMS;
D O I
10.1016/j.envsoft.2014.10.009
中图分类号
TP39 [计算机的应用];
学科分类号
081203 ; 0835 ;
摘要
The present paper discusses a coupled gridded crop modeling and hydrologic modeling system that can examine the benefits of irrigation and costs of irrigation and the coincident impact of the irrigation water withdrawals on surface water hydrology. The system is applied to the Southeastern U.S. The system tools to be discussed include a gridded version (GriDSSAT) of the crop modeling system DSSAT. The irrigation demand from GriDSSAT is coupled to a regional hydrologic model (WaSSI). GriDSSAT and WaSSI are coupled through the USDA NASS CropScape data to provide crop acreages in each watershed. The crop model provides the dynamic irrigation demand which is a function of the weather. The hydrologic model responds to the weather and includes all other anthropogenic competing uses of water. Examples of the system include an analysis of the hydrologic impact of future expansion of irrigation and the real-time impact of short-term drought. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/).
引用
收藏
页码:341 / 355
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Integrated modeling within a Hydrologic Information System: An OpenMI based approach
    Castronova, Anthony M.
    Goodall, Jonathan L.
    Ercan, Mehmet B.
    ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING & SOFTWARE, 2013, 39 : 263 - 273
  • [22] An Integrated Hydrologic Modeling and Data Assimilation Framework
    Kumar, Sujay
    Peters-Lidard, Christa
    Tian, Yudong
    Reichle, Rolf
    Geiger, James
    Alonge, Charles
    Eylander, John
    Houser, Paul
    COMPUTER, 2008, 41 (12) : 52 - +
  • [23] Characterizing urbanization impacts on floodplain through integrated land use, hydrologic, and hydraulic modeling
    Gori, Avantika
    Blessing, Russell
    Juan, Andrew
    Brody, Samuel
    Bedient, Philip
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2019, 568 : 82 - 95
  • [24] Modeling the hydrologic impacts of forest harvesting on Florida flatwoods
    Sun, G
    Riekerk, H
    Comerford, NB
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, 1998, 34 (04): : 843 - 854
  • [25] Ensemble modeling of watershed-scale hydrologic effects of short-rotation woody crop production
    Vache, Kellie
    Meles, Menberu Bitew
    Griffiths, Natalie A.
    Jackson, C. Rhett
    BIOFUELS BIOPRODUCTS & BIOREFINING-BIOFPR, 2021, 15 (05): : 1345 - 1359
  • [26] Automatic Crop Irrigation System
    Bhaskar, Lala
    Koli, Barkha
    Kumar, Punit
    Gaur, Vivek
    2015 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON RELIABILITY, INFOCOM TECHNOLOGIES AND OPTIMIZATION (ICRITO) (TRENDS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS), 2015,
  • [27] Modeling capillary wick irrigation system for greenhouse crop production
    Roonjho, Shaheen Javed
    Kamal, Rowshon Md
    Roonjho, Abdul Rehman
    Agricultural Water Management, 2022, 274
  • [28] Modeling capillary wick irrigation system for greenhouse crop production
    Roonjho, Shaheen Javed
    Kamal, Rowshon Md
    Roonjho, Abdul Rehman
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2022, 274
  • [29] Modeling crop yield as affected by uniformity of sprinkler irrigation system
    Li, JS
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 1998, 38 (02) : 135 - 146
  • [30] Impacts of crop insurance on water withdrawals for irrigation
    Deryugina, Tatyana
    Konar, Megan
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2017, 110 : 437 - 444