University of California researchers have studied the effects of
irrigation on almonds for about 20 years. It has generally been thought
that about 42 inches per acre per season is a reasonable estimate of
water use by mature, productive almonds.
Seasonal water use follows a bell-shaped curve. Under this 42-inch
model, water use starts out low after leafout at about 1.0 inch every
15 days, peaks at about 4.5 inches every 15 days in the first half of
July, and declines back to about 1.0 inch every 15 days as the season
ends.
In some situations, growers may have much less than 42 inches of
water available from stored soil moisture and irrigation water. The
challenge becomes managing crop stress over the course of the season.
One relatively effective approach that doesn't rely heavily on field
monitoring is to attempt to sustain crop stress uniformly across all
stages of tree growth and crop development by using estimates of crop
water use. The limited water allocation is applied as a consistent
percentage of the seasonal water use pattern. If 24 inches of
irrigation water are available, representing about 60 percent of the
potential water use, then the irrigation water would be allocated at
about 60 percent of real-time or historic rates of crop water use over
the course of the season.
UC water management specialist David Goldhamer of the Kearney
Agricultural Center published results of a four-year study illustrating
the effectiveness of the above approach.
Almonds were produced with 55,
70, 85 and 100 percent of a 42-inch water allocation.
Water was either cut back as a consistent percentage of estimated
crop water use to try to sustain less pronounced crop stress across all
stages of crop growth, or cutbacks targeted only pre-harvest, or
post-harvest crop stages for higher crop stress.
The effect of limited water supply was minimized with uniform
allocation of water across all crop stages. However, productivity was
reduced particularly with 55 percent and 70 percent allocations.
- The
uniform crop stress strategy gave both the highest four-year yields,
and the largest average nut size within each water allocation.
- Sharp
cut backs before harvest resulted in the second highest yields, but
reduced nut size.
- Sharply withholding water after harvest affected bud
development and reduced yield the next season.
UC Davis professor Ken Shackel was able to get by with a water
allocation of about 85 percent of full supply with no short-term yield
loss or effect on nut size by using a pressure chamber to actually
track midday crop stress and keeping it within the -12 to -20 bar range
in July during hull split.
For more information on on water management refer to UCManageDrought.ucdavis.edu.