Modelling the soil water balance of canola, Brassica napus L. (Hyola 60)
Abstract (Summary)
Soil Water Balance (SWB) is a generic crop growth and irrigation-scheduling model. It
improves on traditional methods of irrigation scheduling using evaporative demand by
mechanistically and dynamically, quantitatively considering the soil–plant-atmosphere
continuum. However, it needs specific crop growth parameters, which are not readily
available for canola. The objective of this study was to determine crop growth parameters
specific to canola and to identify the effect of water stress at different stages of growth on
seed and oil yield. The study was conducted on the experimental farm of the University
of Pretoria, South Africa, under a rain shelter during 2002 and in an open field during
2003. Weather data were recorded with an automatic weather station, phenological stages
monitored frequently and growth analyses carried out every two weeks. Soil water
content was measured with a neutron water meter weekly during 2002 and once every
five days during 2003. Fractional interception of PAR was also measured with a sunfleck
ceptometer. Specific crop parameters including specific leaf area, the leaf stem
partitioning parameter, maximum rooting depth and thermal time requirements for crop
development were generated from field measurements. These data form the backbone for
accurate mechanistic simulations of the soil-water balance. The model was successfully
calibrated and evaluated, proving its potential to be used as a generic crop irrigationscheduling
tool. Highest seed and oil yield was harvested from the unstressed treatment
and lowest from the treatment stressed during the flowering stage.
i
University of Pretoria etd – Tesfamariam, E H (2004)
And the LORD God took the man, and put him into the
garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it. (Gen 2:15)
If any would not work, neither should he eat. (2 Thes. 3:10)
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:University of Pretoria/Universiteit van Pretoria
School Location:South Africa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:soil moisture canola
ISBN:
Date of Publication: