January-February 2009

SWAT Away Wasted Water

Traditional ways of irrigating crops are changing under the pressure of water scarcity as new technologies emerge.

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Photo: PureSense Pure Sense monitoring station powered by solar panel and battery backup

By Lyn Corum

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New technologies to control and moderate crop water use have emerged in the past decade and are increasing crop yields. A study published in September 2008 by the Pacific Institute, More with Less: Agricultural Water Conservation and Efficiency in California—A Special Focus on the Delta, reviews the research and, in particular, analyzes four scenarios for improving water use efficiency: modest crop shifting, smart irrigation scheduling, advanced irrigation management, and efficient irrigation technology.

The study notes that regulated deficit irrigation can be an important tool to both reduce applied water and increase revenues. Deficit irrigation applies water below the requirements for traditional, full crop evapotranspiration (the movement of water through the plant and its evaporation).  

Irrigation control technology makes regulated deficit irrigation possible without introducing water stress to crops, if it is used during stress-tolerant growth stages, says the study. For example, it notes that regulated deficit irrigation can be used on pistachios during the shell-hardening phase that is particularly stress-tolerant, while the bloom and nut-filling stages are not. Studies have also shown, the study says, that this technique might improve crop quality, particularly for wine grapes.

David Zoldoske, Ph.D., director of the Center for Irrigation Technology at California State University, Fresno, and a member of Water Efficiency’s Editorial Advisory Board, says irrigation control technologies have been evolving for 20 years, and, in the last five years or so, the innovations have focused on monitoring soil moisture.         

Agriculture consulting companies have been around for some time, explains Zoldoske. In the past, neutron probes were used to measure soil moisture, and reports were provided to growers, but that work was time and labor intensive. The latest technology, created by PureSense, uses their programming experience and a lot of science to develop reporting techniques using real-time information, building on existing technology, he says. 

Photos: Acclima
Irrigation control technology makes regulated deficit irrigation possible.
A soil moisture sensor being laid in the ground
Bottom line? “You look to see what best fits the application,” says Zoldoske.        

There are two types of smart water application technologies, also known as SWAT-those that monitor soil moisture in the root zone, and those that use weather data to estimate the amount of water used by the turf to adjust the irrigation. Soil moisture monitoring technologies are reviewed here.

The companies profiled illustrate the technologies available for smart irrigation scheduling and advanced irrigation management, including regulated deficit water usage. The profiles were not intended to promote the companies themselves. Seventeen company products have been evaluated by the Center for Irrigation Technology, featuring technologies using both soil moisture and weather data technologies. These reports are available at www.irrigation.org.

Information-Based Technology
PureSense announced an infusion of $4.5 million in venture capital financing with One Earth Capital, in March 2008, at the same time that it unveiled upgrades to its Irrigation Manager software, its core service offering for efficient water use in agriculture. Founded by Craig Buxton and a small team in 2003, PureSense’s technology was incubated as a technology spin-off of NASA technology at NASA’s Ames laboratory. 

In addition to its Jack London Square headquarters in Oakland, CA, PureSense also has a branch at the Claude Laval Water and Energy Technology Center in Fresno, CA.

The company provides ongoing turnkey consulting service to growers of irrigated crops with real-time support for irrigation and water use, featuring Web-hosted software that receives real-time data via wireless communication from its PureSense proprietary monitoring station. Growers can access the system anytime and from anywhere via computer, phone, and PDA devices.

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Richard Gates, chief information officer, explains that the company contracts with each grower, evaluates water and irrigation needs, installs field monitoring stations, activates online software, and maintains and upgrades its online tools. Pricing is based on the growers’ acreage, type of soil, crops, and unique field conditions that influence a crop’s performance.

For example, row crops like carrots have shallow roots that require different configurations and shorter moisture probes than permanent crops like fruit or nut trees. Also, a sandy topsoil layer will not hold water, but the clay layer underneath will, thereby requiring deeper moisture probes. This kind of information determines the economics of the service and the most viable cost-effective system. Next Page >

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