Water requirement of some forest species used for afforestation in arid and semi-arid regions

Document Type : Scientific Letters

Author

Assistant Prof; Research Division of Natural Resources, Yazd Agricultural and Natural Resource Research and Education Center, AREEO, Yazd, Iran

Abstract

Due to the lack of attention to ecological needs of forest species in arid and semi-arid areas especially the water requirement or evapotranspiration, the afforestation projects have no desirable sustainability and achievement of the goals is not well obtained. As the age of the plants increases, their water requirement increases and in many cases, the competition between the trees to provide the moisture requirements is intensifies. Available studies indicate that most forest species in these areas have lower evapotranspiration (ETc) as compared with potential evapotranspiration (ETp) and have little crop coefficients (Kc). These species can deal with drought stress through various morphological, physiological, biochemical, and ecophysiological mechanisms and or use available water resources to improve the production function and water use efficiency. To measure the daily evapotranspiration and calculate crop coefficient of these plants, direct or lysimetric methods and indirect or computational methods are used. In this paper, the daily water requirement of Haloxyllon aphyllum, Tamarix aphylla, Atriplex sp., Calligonum sp., Poulus euphratica, Elaeagnus angustifolia and several species of eucalyptus (Eucalyptus camaldulensis, E. microtheca, E. sarjentii, E. leucoxylon and E. floktoya) was investigated. Among the species mentioned, Eucalyptus camaldulensis (10 mm) and Calligonum (2.2 mm) had the highest and lowest water requirement.

Keywords


Al-Jamal, M.S., Sammis, T.W., Mexal, J.G., Picchioni, G.A. and Zachritz, W.H., 2002. A growth-irrigation scheduling model for wastewater use in forest production. Agricultural Water Management, 56: 57-79.
 Dahm, C.N., Cleverly, J.R., Allred Coonrod, J.E., Thibault, J.R., McDonnell, D.E. and Gilroy, D.J., 2002. Evapotranspiration at the land/water interface in a semi‐arid drainage basin. Freshwater Biology, 47: 831-843.
 Kirkham, M.B., 2014. Principles of soil and plant water relations. Academic Press, 598p.
 Miller, D.E. and Hang, A.N., 1982. Deficit, high-frequency sprinkler irrigation of wheat. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 46: 386-389.
 Marshall J.K., 1971. Drag measurements in roughness arrays of varying density and distribution. Agricultural Meteorology, 8: 269–292
 Nagler, P.L., Morino, K., Didan, K., Erker, J., Osterberg, J., Hultine, K.R. and Glenn, E.P., 2009. Wide‐area estimates of saltcedar (Tamarix spp.) evapotranspiration on the lower Colorado River measured by heat balance and remote sensing methods. Ecohydrology, 2: 18-33.
 White, D.A., Turner, N.C. & Galbraith, J.H. (2000). Leaf water relations and stomatal behavior of four allopatric Eucalyptus species planted in Mediterranean southwestern Australia. Tree Physiology, 20: 1157–1165.
Xu, H. and Li, Y., 2006. Water-use strategy of three central Asian desert shrubs and their responses to rain pulse events. Plant and Soil, 285: 5-17.
 Xu, X., Zhang, R., Xue, X. and Zhao, M., 1998. Determination of evapotranspiration in the desert area using lysimeters. Communications in Soil Science & Plant Analysis, 29: 1-13.