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Irrigation Principles

Solar energy is the driver of transpiration

The first very important piece of knowledge that a grower must understand is that it is light intensity that drives plant transpiration.  The light energy impinges on the plants leaves and warms them.  The leaves respond by opening their stomata exposing water to the atmosphere and this evaporates and cools the plant.   If the sun is too intense and the plant cannot provide enough water to the leaves then wilt will occur.  The simple way to protect the plant from this is to provide shade.  Note that air temperature has a minor influence as compared with light intensity and a plant can survive at much higher temperatures if some shading is provided.

The other important point that this raises is that it is the light intensity that tells us how much irrigation is required.  By measuring light and integrating it (summing it over time) we can accurately control the frequency of irrigations required to keep sufficient water in the root-zone.  This is particularly important for greenhouse crops that grow in relatively small volumes of media which consequently have small buffering capacities.   

From the light received we can accurately calculate the amount of water that the plant will drink per hour.  However, to provide the plant with that total amount of water we still need to figure out whether to apply the water in larger busts with long intervals in between or else to apply the water in many irrigations, each of small quantity.  It turns out that this decision has far reaching effects.

Water application  

Application rate – dripper selection

If the water is applied to media too rapidly, it will tend to seek easy routes through the media and will channel through without having time to soak sideways. It will thus fail to saturate the full width of the slab or pot.  Even if this is reduced a bit, it will still tend to “cone” down into the media rather than spreading sideways forming what growers call “plugs”.   Plugging refers to the layering of irrigation water in which the last irrigation spreads out sideways wetting the top cm or two pushing the previous water from this layer down into the next layer and so on.  For different types of media there are specific maximum application rates, frequently between 2 and 4 lt/hr.  The media supplier will advise on suitable dripper sizes.

Application amount – irrigation time

Let’s take as an example a 3lt/hr dripper (50ml/min).  If we water for 1 minute, 50mls will have been applied, and for 2 minutes, 100mls.    So is there a difference between say watering for 1 minute every ten minutes compared with watering for 2 minutes every 20 minutes?  In both cases 300mls will have been applied in an hour?  Surprisingly there is a significant difference.  There will be more run-off from the few large irrigations and the average media moisture level will be lower.   This in turn will affect the root-zone EC and also will also affect the plants growth habit. 

The few, large irrigations result in a lower EC (because of the greater run-off and consequent better flushing action) and the lower average moisture content will lead to a more generative growth habit where the plant puts more energy into growing flowers and fruit than in growing stems and leaves whilst the many, small irrigations will have a higher root-zone EC (which may need to be compensated for) with higher moisture content and a more vegetative growth habit.  

For this reason, we tend to adjust the size of the irrigations to help us achieve other targets and in particular for keeping the crop in balance between too vegetative and too generative.  For instance, in the high-light intensity of summer when the plants will naturally tend toward generative habit we can elect to have many small irrigations at a slightly lower irrigation EC to help bring the plant into better balance.  

Also, when wetting up in the morning small irrigations will be best but once wetted up and we want to encourage good flushing action to prevent EC build up in the pot we could switch to fewer, larger irrigations – although, in summer other considerations may indicate maintaining a small irrigation quantity through the whole day. 

It is normal to try to achieve a run-off of around 30% from about 11:00am on for vegetables and 40% to 50% for flowers.

Application frequency – setting the solar integrator trigger

Once we have decided on the amount of water to be applied in each watering we can decide on the frequency at which it should be applied.   Remember that the total amount needed by the plant is dictated by solar energy and so a solar integrator is used.  However, we need to set this appropriately.   In the mid-part of the day in summer we receive about 1000Watts of energy per square metre (3.6 MJoules/hour/m2,  360 Joules/hour/cm2 or 1800umol/sec/m2).  The plants in the greenhouse might receive about 70% of this or less if shading is used and, in turn, will use about 70% of the light they receive for transpiration.  Working backwards from that we can derive the energy absorbed by the crop which will accurately predict how much water they need – add to this the amount of run-off needed and you can predict the irrigation requirement.  This works out to about 1.1 ltr/m2 in full summer sunlight. (varies a little by crop from 0.8ltr/m2 to 1.2ltr/m2)  This assumes that the crop intercepts all of the suns rays and for a vine crop this will generally be true except when the crop is very young.  At a planting density of 2.2 to 2.5 tomatoes per m2 this works out to a little less than 500ml/plant/hr.  If irrigation quantity (round size) is set to 100ml then we need 5 irrigations per hour and the solar integrator would need to be set to 0.8MJoule, 80Joule/cm2 or if a PAR sensor is used about 1.4mols.  If the round size is changed to 50ml then these figures would need to be halved.  Round sizes for vine crops grown in slabs are frequently in the range 20ml to 200ml and most commonly around 80-120ml.

The figures quoted above are really just starting points for your settings and will need to be modified depending on the greenhouse construction, shape, material, condition and cleanliness of covering and angle of incidence of the sun. Cleanliness, calibration, mounting angle of the solar sensor will also play a large part as will the use of shade cloth or white wash.  

By careful monitoring of root zone conditions (input, output and media moisture) and observing the crop habit, these settings can be adjusted by trial and error to get the best from your irrigation system.  

 

See also Steering tomatoes by irrigation manipulation 
And Root Zone Monitoring Techniques

Jeff Broad
Autogrow Systems Ltd
 

 

     
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