TY - JOUR AU - Ventrella, Domenico AU - Di Giacomo, Enza AU - Fiorentino, Costanza AU - Giglio, Luisa AU - Lopez, Raffaele AU - Guastaferro, Francesca AU - Castrignanò, Annamaria PY - 2010/06/30 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Soil Water Balance and Irrigation Strategies in an Agricultural District of Southern Italy JF - Italian Journal of Agronomy JA - Ital J Agronomy VL - 5 IS - 2 SE - Original Articles DO - 10.4081/ija.2010.193 UR - https://www.agronomy.it/agro/article/view/ija.2010.193 SP - 193-204 AB - An efficient management of water resources is considered very important for Mediterranean regions of Italy in order to improve the economical and environmental sustainability of the agricultural activity. The purpose of this study is to analyze the components of soil water balance in an important district included in the regions of Basilicata and Puglia and situated in the Jonical coastal area of Southern Italy and mainly cropped with horticultural crops. The study was performed by using the spatially distributed and physically based model SIMODIS in order to individuate the best irrigation management maximizing the water use efficiency and minimizing water losses by deep percolation and soil evaporation. SIMODIS was applied taking in to account the soil spatial variability and localization of cadastral units for two crops, durum wheat and water melon. For water melon recognition in 2007 a remote sensed image, from SPOT5 satellite, at the spatial resolution of 10 m, has been used. In 2008, a multi-temporal data set was available, from SPOT5 satellite to produce a land cover map for the classes water melon and durum wheat. Water melon cultivation was simulated adopting different water supply managements: rainfed and four irrigation strategies based on (i) soil water availability and (ii) plant water status adopting a threshold daily stress value. For each management, several water management indicators were calculated and mapped in GIS environment. For seasonal irrigation depth, actual evapotranspiration and irrigation efficiency were also determined. The analysis allowed to individuate the areas particularly sensitive to water losses by deep percolation because of their hydraulic functions characterized by low water retention and large values of saturated hydraulic conductivity. For these areas, the irrigation based on plant water status caused very high water losses by drainage. On the contrary, the irrigation scheduled on soil base allowed to control better this component of soil water balance. SIMODIS resulted a useful tool to analyse the soil water balance at spatial scale and to support the local irrigation authority for planning the irrigation water distribution. ER -