Monday, 6 October 2008
George R. Brown Convention Center, Exhibit Hall E
Judy A. Tolk and Steven R. Evett, USDA-ARS, Bushland, TX
Knowledge of
evapotranspiration (ET) is vital for the management of our fresh water
resources. One method for determining ET
is through the measurement of the soil water balance where ET is the residual
calculated from the change in soil water storage plus rainfall and irrigation
and minus drainage and runoff. The
objective of this research was to compare the ET calculations where the change
in soil water storage was measured using the neutron moisture meter (NMM) and using
weighing lysimeters. Cotton was grown in 2006 and 2007 at the
USDA-ARS, Bushland, TX in weighing lysimeters
with a 0.75-m2 surface area and 2.3-m depth containing monolithic
soil cores, centrally located NMM access tubes, and drainage systems. The texture of the four soils ranged from
fine sand to clay loam. The NMM was
field-calibrated at the monolithic core collection sites. The change in soil
water storage was measured daily with the weighing lysimeters,
and at intervals ranging from 12 to 60 days using the NMM. Drainage and rainfall were also
measured. The ET calculated using the
NMM method tended to be within ±2% of the lysimeter
ET for the finer textured soils, but NMM method underestimated ET by about 7%
in the fine sand, probably due to errors created by the timing of the drainage
and NMM measurements. When all other soil
water balance components are quantified, a field-calibrated NMM can accurately
measure changes in soil water balance for the calculation of ET.