Distributed ecohydrological modelling to evaluate the performance of irrigation system in Sirsa district, India: I. Current water management and its productivity
Singh, R. , Kroes, J.G. , van Dam, J.C. , Feddes, R.A. Distributed ecohydrological modelling to evaluate the performance of irrigation system in Sirsa district, India: I. Current water management and its productivity. Journal of Hydrology Volume 329, Issue 3-4, 15 October 2006, Pages 692-713
Singh, R. , Kroes, J.G. , van Dam, J.C. , Feddes, R.A. Distributed
ecohydrological modelling to evaluate the performance of irrigation
system in Sirsa district, India: I. Current water management and
its productivity. Journal of Hydrology Volume 329, Issue 3-4, 15
October 2006, Pages 692-713
Abstract - Distributed ecohydrological modelling can provide a
useful tool to evaluate the performance of irrigation systems at
different spatial and temporal scales. Sirsa district, covering
4270 km2 in the western part of Haryana State (India), has been
selected for a case study with typical problems of canal water
scarcity, poor groundwater quality, rising and declining
groundwater levels, and sub-optimal crop production. The field
scale ecohydrological model SWAP including detailed crop growth
simulations was extended in a distributed manner to quantify the
required hydrological and biophysical variables for all
combinations of weather-crop-soil-irrigation in the study area.
Field experiments, satellite images and existing geographical data
were used to aggregate the representative input parameters of all
so-called homogeneous 'simulation units' and their boundary
conditions. The simulated mean annual evapotranspiration (689 mm)
over the entire Sirsa district was 15% lower as compared to the
mean annual evapotranspiration (809 mm) estimated by independent
remote sensing approach. The simulated water and salt limited crop
yields showed a good correspondence with the independent crop
yields data obtained from remote sensing, field measurements and
statistical records. The performance of Sirsa district during the
agricultural year 2001-2002 was evaluated in terms of water
productivity, net groundwater recharge and salt build-up. Factors
responsible for low water productivity in Sirsa district include a
high percentage of soil evaporation into evapotranspiration
(17-54%, highest for rice), percolation from fields and seepage
losses from the conveyance system (34-43% of the total canal
inflow). The study also revealed a large variation of net
groundwater recharge and salt build-up over different canal
commands, which threatens the sustainability of irrigated
agriculture in Sirsa district.



