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OCCASION: New Planning Tool for Optimal Climate Change Adaption Strategies in Irrigation
Authors:Niels Schütze  Gerd H Schmitz
Affiliation:1Research Associate, Institute of Hydrology and Meteorology, Dresden Univ. of Technology, Würzburger St. 46, 01187 Dresden, Germany (corresponding author). E-mail: ns1@rcs.urz.tu-dresden.de
2Professor, Institute of Hydrology and Meteorology, Dresden Univ. of Technology, Würzburger St. 46, 01187 Dresden, Germany.
Abstract:To sustain productive irrigated agriculture with limited water resources requires a high water use efficiency. This can be achieved by the precise scheduling of deficit irrigation systems taking into account the crops’ response to water stress at different stages of plant growth. Particularly in the light of climate change with rising population numbers and increasing water scarcity, an optimal solution for this task is of paramount importance. We solve the corresponding complex multidimensional and nonlinear optimization problem, i.e., finding the ideal schedule for maximum crop yield with a given water volume by a well tailored approach which offers straightforward application facilities. A global optimization technique allows, together with physically based modeling, for the risk assessment in yield reduction considering different sources of uncertainty (e.g., climate, soil conditions, and management). A new stochastic framework for decision support is developed which aims at optimal climate change adaption strategies in irrigation. It consists of: (1) a weather generator for simulating regional impacts of climate change; (2) a tailor-made evolutionary optimization algorithm for optimal irrigation scheduling with limited water supply; and (3) mechanistic models for rigorously simulating water transport and crop growth. The result, namely, stochastic crop-water production functions, allows to assess the impact of climate variability on potential yield and thus provides a valuable tool for estimating minimum water demands for irrigation in water resources planning and management, assisting furthermore in generating maps of yield uncertainty for specific crops and specific agricultural areas. The tool is successfully applied at an experimental site in southern France. The impacts of predicted climate variability on maize are discussed.
Keywords:Irrigation  Crops  Scheduling  Risk management  Climate change  
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