Laser aimed at
farm water
Experimental
contraption
focuses on how
much water is
lost to
evaporation
By JOHN ROGERS
Associated Press
December 31,
2008
 |
|
Samer
Naif, a
student
at the
University
of
California
San
Diego,
sits
atop a
scinillometer
transmitter
in an
alfalfa
field in
Blythe.
It’s a
laser
device
that
measures
evaporation
and
helps in
calculating
exactly
how much
water is
needed
to
properly
irrigate.
- Ric
Francis/Associated
Press |
LOS ANGELES -
Seventy-six
years after the
invention of the
modern sprinkler
helped
revolutionize
farming, a
professor of
environmental
engineering is
pointing a laser
beam across an
alfalfa crop in
Southern
California's
bone-dry
Imperial Valley,
looking for a
better way to
conserve the
millions of
gallons of water
sprayed each
year on thirsty
crops.
Jan Kleissl and
a handful of his
students at the
University of
California, San
Diego, have
rigged up a
telescope-looking
contraption
called a large
aperture
scintillometer
to study exactly
how much water
crops lose to
evaporation and
the peak times
that water
disappears.
The hope is to
give farmers a
more accurate,
up-to-date
reading of how
efficiently
their crops are
using water than
current
technology
allows.
"What's new
about our
approach is the
monitoring side
of it," Kleissl
said by phone
from his office.
"We're trying to
improve on
that."
Some
advancements in
irrigation have
focused on the
water delivery
system - such as
Southern
California
grower Orton
Englehart's 1932
invention of the
horizontal
action impact
drive sprinkler,
which he
patented the
following year.
But while most
farmers are
experts at
managing their
irrigation by
sight, recent
years' droughts
have called for
more
sophisticated
ways to use -
and save -
water.
Water became an
even more
valuable
commodity in
California last
year, when a
federal judge
ordered federal
and state
agencies to
restrict pumping
in the
Sacramento-San
Joaquin River
Delta to protect
the threatened
delta smelt,
severely cutting
the growers'
supply.
Further
restrictions
could result
from last
month's decision
by state fish
and wildlife
managers to
limit pumping to
protect another
native fish, the
longfin smelt.
These shortages
are prompting
researchers to
devise new ways
to determine
when to irrigate
and how much
water to use,
said Khaled
Bali, an
irrigation
expert for the
University of
California
Cooperative
Extension office
in Imperial
County.
"There's not
enough water to
go around," he
said.
San Diego County
farmer Bob
Polito, who was
forced to remove
10 of his 60
acres of citrus
and avocado
trees from
production after
last year's
pumping
restrictions,
said high-tech
irrigation aids
have so far been
too expensive
for him to use.
But he said the
increasing
scarcity of
water may force
him to invest in
technology to
monitor his
trees' water
efficiency.
"Anything that
gives you an
accurate
accounting on
that score would
be a help to
farmers," Polito
said.
Researchers are
also testing a
device that
measures the
velocity at
which sap creeps
up trees. When
the sap's
movement slows,
growers would
know that the
trees need less
water and reduce
the amount that
they use.
Other tests
involve using
satellite
imagery to
measure "evapotranspiration"
- the amount of
water that seeps
into the
atmosphere from
soil surfaces
and plants.
During periods
of slow
evapotranspiration
- when plants
require less
water - farmers
can cut down on
irrigation.
Many farmers
already use a
formula based on
historic
evapotranspiration
averages gleaned
from
meteorological
data - combined
with on-site
observations -
to devise their
irrigation
strategies.
But Kleissl's
team hopes to
give farmers
more valuable
information by
using the
scintillometer,
which focuses
laser beams
across a farm
field and
records
fluctuations of
the refractive
index of air
that is caused
by such things
as changes in
temperature and
humidity.
What the device
sees is similar
to the waves in
the air that
people see
emanating from
the pavement of
a highway on a
hot day. But the
scintillometer
sees those waves
in much greater
detail. The hope
is farmers can
eventually use
the lasers to
more accurately
measure the
amount of
irrigated farm
water lost to
evapotranspiration.
Kleissl's
initial test of
the technology
seeks to measure
evapotranspiration
among alfalfa
crops to
determine the
months in which
low yields and
high
evapotranspiration
rates coincide.
That data would
allow farmers to
fallow their
crops at times
of least
efficiency and
use the water
for other
applications.
A likely
scenario,
particularly in
the parched
Imperial Valley,
California's
southernmost
desert, would be
to let the
alfalfa crop go
fallow during
the hot summer
months when
yields are
smaller and more
water is
required, while
capitalizing on
production
during the other
three seasons.
His study, which
will take at
least two years
to complete, is
unfolding on an
experimental
farm operated by
the University
of California's
extension
program. A field
about a
half-mile long
and quarter-mile
wide has been
planted in
alfalfa, a
particularly
thirsty crop. It
is also the crop
most commonly
found in the
Imperial Valley,
some 200 miles
southeast of Los
Angeles, where
rainfall
averages fewer
than 3 inches a
year and high
temperatures
generally exceed
100 degrees for
several months
of the year.
Surveying half
of the field is
a scintillometer,
while the other
half is being
farmed and
irrigated
conventionally.
If the tests
show a
substantial
water savings,
Kleissl would
like to see
scintillometers
placed in
agricultural
areas around the
state. He
estimates that
10, which he
says could cover
a wide range of
farm areas
across
California,
could be
installed for an
initial
investment of
$500,000 to
$700,000,
although that
wouldn't include
the cost of
maintaining and
monitoring them.
David Zoldoske,
who leads the
International
Center for Water
Technology at
California State
University,
Fresno, said the
scintillometer
project shows
promise, but
would be best
used in
combination with
other
technologies
that generate
and analyze data
on plants' water
needs.
"It's simply
just another way
to have good
information," he
said. "It's like
your doctor: If
he can measure
your pulse and
some other
things, that
really helps him
manage your
health. It's the
same with
plants."
Associated Press
Writer Jacob
Adelman
contributed to
this story.
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