Inter-dripper variation of soil water and salt in a mulched drip irrigated cotton field: Advantages of 3-D modelling

Abstract Two-dimensional (2-D) numerical models have been widely used to predict soil water-salt transport under mulched drip irrigation. However, conventional 2-D models often neglect the spatial variation of soil water-salt transport along drip lines and over-simplifies it by averaging values. This calls for a more robust model to better reflect the actual spatial and temporal variation of soil water-salt distribution in the field, especially in arid regions using brackish water with additional salt. In this study, mulched drip irrigation with brackish water was applied to a cotton field with loam soil in an arid region of southern Xinjiang, northwest China. The changes of soil water potential and total dissolved solid (TDS) of soil water over two irrigation events were intensively measured on hourly base to establish and calibrate a 3-D model, and another five irrigation cycles were monitored on daily base to validate the 3-D model. The mean absolute relative errors between measured and calculated soil water potential and TDS of soil water were 13.7% and 10.7% during hourly-based model calibration, even though there might be bias inevitably introduced by pre-determined sampling intervals and volumes. The calculated values during model validation were reasonably in line with the temporal patterns of soil moisture and TDS before and after irrigation at different irrigation cycles. This 3-D model was then applied to predict the spatial and temporal variations of soil water-salt transport during and after irrigation. Our results show that (1) the 3-D model with additional consideration on point-source discharge from individual drippers effectively reflected the wet front interferences along the drip lines. (2) A semi-elliptic cylindrical wet bulb together with relatively low salinity was formed along the drip lines, which matched well with the cotton layout (one mulch, two drip lines and four rows). However, the uneven overlapping of wet front interferences among individual drippers required to optimize the design of dripper intervals and irrigation regime to provide desirable soil water-salt conditions for cotton growth in this loam soil. (3) During the 96 h after irrigation, the TDS of soil water was always greatest in the dense root zone, increasing from approximately 3.8 g L−1 to 7.0 g L−1 as a result of root water uptake. Such localized re-salinization patterns demand repeated leaching in continued irrigation cycles to ensure cotton growth. Our study suggests that a smaller interspace between drippers with short but more frequent irrigation cycles would be much more helpful to timely and spatial-precisely meet plant water demanding.

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