UK Research Finds Pulse Irrigation Potentially Useful For Farmers
LEXINGTON, KY.
In today’s economic climate, Kentucky farmers
are trying to save money across the board
– from planting to harvest and everything in
between. A few big money items can be irrigation
and fertilizer. If farmers can reduce their
need for both, everyone wins. University of Kentucky
College of Agriculture researchers in horticulture
and biosystems and agricultural
engineering are studying a type of irrigation
that may help.
Producers use many different methods to
apply drip irrigation.
“Most often the irrigation system is simply operated
for a set period of time, usually between
one and three hours per zone,” said Richard
Warner, water resources and sediment control
specialist with UK’s Biosystems and Agricultural
Engineering Department. “Other producers
utilize either one or two tensiometers which
measure the soil moisture to a specified level.”
UK researchers currently are testing a more
non-traditional way of irrigating crops called
pulse irrigation. This system provides small intervals
of water to meet the moisture needs of a
plant. For example, Warner said he can program
a pulse irrigation system to operate for 10
to 15 minutes every hour for six to 12 hours per
day. This provides just enough water to the
upper root zone to meet the plant’s needs.
“We conducted experiments on a standard
drip irrigation system to determine the downward
movement of water,” Warner explained.
“We excavated beneath a plot, entering through
the side of the plot, and measured the quantity
of water that had moved through an 18-inch
soil depth.”
Warner said within 30 minutes, he was measuring
flow through the soil, which means the
irrigation water was moving through the openings
in the soil created by decayed roots and
worms.
“There was a significant amount of water and
applied fertilizers that the plant did not use,”
he said. “They were basically wasted. With
pulse irrigation, we may be able to eliminate a
lot of those wasted inputs.”
Besides a drip irrigation system, a producer
wanting to use pulse irrigation will need an irrigation
controller, solenoid valves for each zone
and direct burial underground wire that connects
the electrical valves to the controller.
Warner expects many benefits of pulse irrigation,
not the least of which is less water and fertilizer
migrating into the groundwater.
“The amount of water applied could be reduced
by as much as 20 percent, and that will
provide substantial savings, especially for those
operators who purchase city water,” he said.
“There may be a corresponding reduction in fertilizer
since, with better usage of water, there
should be a more efficient usage of nutrients.”
Research specialists have begun applying this
joint departmental research through demonstration
projects involving tomatoes, blackberries
and blueberries.
“As we make progress, we will host a field day
to demonstrate the pulse irrigation system – the
components, installation and operation,”
Warner said. “The horticulture department is
conducting yield studies to contrast standard
drip irrigation practices with pulse irrigation,
and we’ll provide the results through extension
publications and other media.” Δ