Hydro-economic basin impacts of extensive adoption of deficit irrigation by farmers: Are we overestimating water resources?
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Deficit irrigation Hydro-economic models Return flows
Fecha
2024-03-21Referencia bibliográfica
Berbel, Julio, et al. Hydro-economic basin impacts of extensive adoption of deficit irrigation by farmers: Are we overestimating water resources? Journal of Hydrology 634 (2024) 131075 [10.1016/j.jhydrol.2024.131075]
Patrocinador
Project PRIMA-BONEX (Grant Number 2141); Project BHYEM (PID2019-107127RB-I0); Project SEKECO (1263831-R) Programa Operativo FEDER Andalucía 2014–2020); Funding for open access charge: Universidad de Córdoba / CBUA.Resumen
Deficit irrigation (DI) is an agronomic practice in which the volume of irrigation water applied is below
maximum yield requirements, usually during drought-sensitive growth stages. DI is often used when water is
scarce, and farmers need to either reduce the irrigated area or reduce the water supply to the existing irrigated
area. This research presents an agroeconomic model of field efficiencies and related losses to study the relationship
between DI adoption and return flows (RF). Results show that RF are significantly overestimated when
DI is widely adopted as there are no losses when relative irrigation supply (ν) is low. The hydrological impact at
basin level has been illustrated for the Guadalquivir River Basin, showing that RF and water resources are
substantially overestimated when constant efficiency values (an assumption common to many hydrological
models) are used without including the impact of DI on RF.