Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available Research

The role of crop canopies in the global water cycle is a topic of increasing international interest. How much rain and sprinkler-irrigation water are returned to the atmosphere or reach the soils beneath crop canopies, and the pathways of those water inputs at the soil, are linked to agricultural pr...

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Main Authors: Meimei Lin, Seyed Mohammad Moein Sadeghi‬, John T. Van Stan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Hydrology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/7/4/76
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spelling doaj-55b7208b1cb2481dacfdc2abe35fd37b2020-11-25T03:44:28ZengMDPI AGHydrology2306-53382020-10-017767610.3390/hydrology7040076Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available ResearchMeimei Lin0Seyed Mohammad Moein Sadeghi‬1John T. Van Stan2Department of Geology & Geography, Georgia Southern University, Savannah, GA 31419, USADepartment of Forestry and Forest Economics, University of Tehran, Tehran P9CQ+W4, IranDepartment of Geology & Geography, Georgia Southern University, Savannah, GA 31419, USAThe role of crop canopies in the global water cycle is a topic of increasing international interest. How much rain and sprinkler-irrigation water are returned to the atmosphere or reach the soils beneath crop canopies, and the pathways of those water inputs at the soil, are linked to agricultural productivity and sustainability. This concise-format review synthesized and evaluated the available, limited, observational data (138 studies) on cropland throughfall, stemflow, and/or interception for >60 crop species covering all major climate types to obtain a global analysis of rainfall and sprinkler-irrigation partitioning by crop canopies. Partitions normalized per unit rain/sprinkler-irrigation (relative fractions, %) vary greatly across crop types with the interquartile range of throughfall, stemflow, and interception being 58–83%, 2–26%, and 11–32%, respectively. Stemflow data distribution across crop types is more often different than for throughfall and interception, contributing to overall variations in the partitioning of rain and irrigation observed to date. Partitions per storm also differ depending on the magnitude of rain or sprinkler-irrigation events and the stage of crop growth. Furthermore, throughfall and stemflow input patterns at the soil surface and subsurface may erode soils through different physical processes (i.e., throughfall droplet impact/splash versus scouring by stemflow); however, more research is needed to elucidate the underlying mechanisms and overall impacts. Finally, comparative analyses of partitions among croplands, shrublands, and forests indicate that crop canopies partition rain inputs differently and that there is a lack of studies in croplands. Hence, we suggest that future effort should be directed to the partitioning of rainfall and sprinkler-irrigation by canopies in agricultural settings.https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/7/4/76throughfallstemflowinterceptionagriculturemeta-analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Meimei Lin
Seyed Mohammad Moein Sadeghi‬
John T. Van Stan
spellingShingle Meimei Lin
Seyed Mohammad Moein Sadeghi‬
John T. Van Stan
Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available Research
Hydrology
throughfall
stemflow
interception
agriculture
meta-analysis
author_facet Meimei Lin
Seyed Mohammad Moein Sadeghi‬
John T. Van Stan
author_sort Meimei Lin
title Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available Research
title_short Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available Research
title_full Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available Research
title_fullStr Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available Research
title_full_unstemmed Partitioning of Rainfall and Sprinkler-Irrigation by Crop Canopies: A Global Review and Evaluation of Available Research
title_sort partitioning of rainfall and sprinkler-irrigation by crop canopies: a global review and evaluation of available research
publisher MDPI AG
series Hydrology
issn 2306-5338
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The role of crop canopies in the global water cycle is a topic of increasing international interest. How much rain and sprinkler-irrigation water are returned to the atmosphere or reach the soils beneath crop canopies, and the pathways of those water inputs at the soil, are linked to agricultural productivity and sustainability. This concise-format review synthesized and evaluated the available, limited, observational data (138 studies) on cropland throughfall, stemflow, and/or interception for >60 crop species covering all major climate types to obtain a global analysis of rainfall and sprinkler-irrigation partitioning by crop canopies. Partitions normalized per unit rain/sprinkler-irrigation (relative fractions, %) vary greatly across crop types with the interquartile range of throughfall, stemflow, and interception being 58–83%, 2–26%, and 11–32%, respectively. Stemflow data distribution across crop types is more often different than for throughfall and interception, contributing to overall variations in the partitioning of rain and irrigation observed to date. Partitions per storm also differ depending on the magnitude of rain or sprinkler-irrigation events and the stage of crop growth. Furthermore, throughfall and stemflow input patterns at the soil surface and subsurface may erode soils through different physical processes (i.e., throughfall droplet impact/splash versus scouring by stemflow); however, more research is needed to elucidate the underlying mechanisms and overall impacts. Finally, comparative analyses of partitions among croplands, shrublands, and forests indicate that crop canopies partition rain inputs differently and that there is a lack of studies in croplands. Hence, we suggest that future effort should be directed to the partitioning of rainfall and sprinkler-irrigation by canopies in agricultural settings.
topic throughfall
stemflow
interception
agriculture
meta-analysis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/7/4/76
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