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Analysis of Relative Water Use Between Flood- and DripIrrigated Fields Deming, New Mexico David Jordan, PE, INTERA Guillermo Martinez, PhD, INTERA Amber Whittaker, INTERA Rick Allen, PE, PhD, University of Idaho Study Objective Conversion to drip-irrigation has been funded by NMISC to promote water conservation in the Deming area We sought to compare water use between drip-irrigated and flood-irrigated fields We used field data combined with satellite imagery to quantify relative water use difference Location Map Study Area Irrigation Methods: Flood Irrigation Methods: Sprinkler Irrigation Methods: Drip Field Application Efficiency Irrigation Method Amount of Water Used by Crop Return Flow Flood irrigation 60% 40% Sprinkler irrigation 75% 25% Drip irrigation 90% 10% Source: www.fao.org Field Data – 103 Fields Identify: Crop type Irrigation Method Measure location of field Field Summary Crop Type Alfalfa Bean Chile Corn Cotton Milo Pecan Total Irrigation Method Drip Flood Sprinkler 11 1 4 1 9 2 9 4 1 19 11 11 10 3 7 63 35 5 Total 16 1 11 14 30 21 10 103 Field Results After evaluating field irrigation method and extent, cotton and milo fields were selected to study differences between drip and flood irrigation methods. Landsat Satellite Data for Evaluating Agricultural Practices Family of satellites operating since 1972 Orbits at ~450 miles above the earth Passes over every 16 days Each image (scene) is about 100 miles on a side What Does Landsat “See”? Landsat Resolution Field: 14 acres Landsat Pixel: 0.22 acres Example Landsat Image Natural color (3, 2, 1) False color (4, 3, 2) Temperature Data Using a different band of the spectrum to “see” Example: Thermal imaging using infrared wavelengths Evaporation Causes Cooling “Swamp cooler” analogy Use temperature of fields to determine relative water consumption Plants Cool the Air Plants transpire water and water evaporates from the soil Evaporation uses heat energy and cools the surroundings: ET = F Water Use Temperature Results Hot Temperatures Bare dirt: 110º F Fields: 85º F Cool August 5th 2012 Example Temperature Data Cotton and Milo Drip fields Flood fields August 5th 2012 Average Temperature for Milo Average difference: 3.9 degrees F Average Temperature for Cotton Average difference: 1.0 degrees F Average Temperature for Corn Average difference*: 7.8 degrees F Summary Lower temperature = more overall water usage (drip) Higher temperature = less overall water usage (flood) Important – higher water usage indicates more robust vegetation and hence higher yield – more crop is produced resulting in economic benefit We can show this using a vegetation index Vegetation Index Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) Ratio using near-infrared (Band 4) and visible red (Band 3) NDVI calculated on each pixel in the Landsat image using image-processing software: Band 4 - Band 3 NDVI Band 4 Band 3 NDVI Image NDVI Can Show Relative Crop Yield NDVI by Crop Type: Milo NDVI by Crop Type: Cotton NDVI by Crop Type: Corn Field Comparison Flood Drip Conclusions We are able to see a difference in temperature between drip-irrigated and flood-irrigated fields The lower temperature in drip-irrigated fields indicates higher water consumption NDVI supports the temperature analysis and indicates more robust vegetation and higher relative yield Bottom line: more water used, but yield is higher Next Steps Run METRIC analysis to confirm the findings based on NDVI and temperature METRIC can give us more quantitative information on actual water usage (evapotranspiration, or ET) METRIC Mapping EvapoTranspiration with high Resolution and Internalized Calibration Evapotranspiration = net radiation – soil heat flux – heat flux to the air Evapotranspiration net radiation heat flux to the air soil heat flux Preliminary METRIC Results High ET Low ET August 5th 2012 Preliminary METRIC Results Thank you