More Efficient Water Management in Rice Crops
More Efficient Water Management in
Rice Crops
The aim of the study was to
quantify the water used in two different systems of rice crop, water-seeded
system and dry-seeded system, during the first month of crop growth. This
research was carried out in California (USA) along with the Universidad
Politécnica de Madrid (UPM) and 15 researchers from other universities and
research centers of Italy, China, Egypt and United States. Results suggest that
these two systems of water management show no differences regarding the total
crop cycle.
Rice is the third-largest global
crop area (165m hectares) after wheat and corn, but it is the most important
crop worldwide considering the large area and the amount of people who depend
on their harvest. Globally, the cultivated area in China and India represents
half of the total surface.
Spain has the second largest rice
area of the European Union with 115,000 hectares behind Italy. Rice crops
usually grow under conditions of continuously flooded soils and this requires
large amounts of water. An alternative system of crop consists of watering the
soil during the first month and flooding it after that period. Are there any
differences in the consumption of water between these systems?
To answer this question, a group
of researchers from diverse countries has carried out a 3-year study on paddies
fields in California (USA) using the Eddy Covariance method to determine the
crop evapotranspiration (combination of two processes of leaking water:
evaporation through soil surface and evaporation through crop transpiration)
and other set of variables (such as water drain and irrigation water input).
The research shows that there are
not significant differences in the total evapotranspiration of the cycle
between a water-seeded system and a dry-seeded system. However, a tendency to
lower values for non-flooded soils was observed in 2007, this suggests that is
possible to reduce evapotranspiration when rice is sown in soil humidity
conditions avoiding the flooding of ground.