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Library impact of expanding flooded land area on the annual evaporation of rice

impact of expanding flooded land area on the annual evaporation of rice

impact of expanding flooded land area on the annual evaporation of rice

Resource information

Date of publication
декабря 2016
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201600180378
Pages
181-193

The amount of published data on annual evaporation on rice remains extremely limited despite the role of rice as a key food source. We report on six years of rice evaporation measurements, based on the eddy covariance method. This rice was cultivated in the hot dry climate of California, where water is a scarce and precious resource. During the first year, we found that rice evaporation exceeded potential evaporation rates and summed to 1155mmy−1. In following years, we found that annual evaporation decreased yearly, yielding a 15% reduction (to 982mmy−1) by the sixth year. The remainder of the paper examined the how and why of this unexpected decreasing trend in annual evaporation occurred.We inspected trends in variations in biophysical variables (net radiation, temperature, leaf area index) associated with evaporation and potential biases in the flux measurements using energy balance closure and co-spectral analysis. None of the biophysical variables varied enough to explain this observation. What did change was the area of rice, and nearby flooded wetlands. During the first year, the flooded rice field was less than 1km2 in area and was relatively isolated. This situation promoted an ‘oasis effect’ that enabled warm dry air to be entrained from across the top of the planetary boundary layer; this contention was supported by the co-spectral analysis and analysis with a coupled surface energy balance-planetary boundary layer model. By the sixth year of this project, the area of flooded rice and wetlands approached 6km2, a horizontal scale that seemed to inhibit the ‘oasis effect’. We conclude that the amount of water used, on an area basis, by wetland restoration projects will depend upon the spatial extent of these projects.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Baldocchi, Dennis
Sara Knox
Iryna Dronova
Joe Verfaillie
Patty Oikawa
Cove Sturtevant
Jaclyn Hatala Matthes
Matteo Detto

Publisher(s)
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