4.7 Article

Comparing spatial and temporal variability of the system Water Use Efficiency in a Lower Mississippi River watershed

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY-REGIONAL STUDIES
Volume 42, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrh.2022.101141

Keywords

System water use efficiency; Landscape heterogeneity; Obion River; TN; Lower Mississippi River; Fragipan; Water holding capacity

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Agriculture [2014-51130-22493, 2015-68007-23212]
  2. NIFA [687152, 2014-51130-22493] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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This study investigates the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of Water Use Efficiency (WUE) and system WUE (sWUE) in the Obion River watershed, Tennessee. The findings highlight the importance of using sWUE as an indicator of water holding capacity and yield differences in agricultural landscapes. The presence of fragipan layers and soil types are shown to affect runoff and water storage capacity.
Study Region: The Obion River watershed, Tennessee, is representative of Lower Mississippi River watersheds with loess soils and a fragipan layer. Study Focus: Spatial and temporal heterogeneity of Water Use Efficiency (WUE) and system WUE (sWUE) are examined under different landscapes. Unlike WUE, sWUE considers runoff, better reflecting coupled soil-management-climate effects on an agricultural system. Representative hillslopes grouped in Hydrologic Response Classes (HRCs) were modeled from 1980 to 2050 using the Water Erosion Prediction Project to quantify yields, water budgets, and WUE/ sWUE. HRC-I is flat with clayey soils, low infiltration, and high evapotranspiration. HRC-II has moderate slopes, silty soils, and fragipan layers causing low infiltration and high runoff. HRC-III is similar but with no fragipan producing moderate infiltration and low runoff. New Hydrological Insights: HRC-III experiences 60 % less runoff than the other HRCs due to loess soils with no fragipan. It is the only HRC to store water during the growing season. Clay soils in HRC-I and fragipan layers in HRC-II have less capacity to hold water. sWUE is a more useful index than WUE to describe differences in water holding capacity and ultimately yield across agricultural landscapes. sWUE varies spatially from its correlation with runoff, which has a coefficient of variation (CV) of 71 % across the watershed. Evapotranspiration has a CV 16 %. Temporally, sWUE decreases 10 % by 2050, but its spatial variability reaches 25 %.

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