Rothamsted irrigation 1964-76
A series of irrigation experiments was done at Rothamsted where the soil is a flinty silty clay loam over flinty clay. The results are compared with those obtained by Penman (1962, 1970, 1971) at Woburn where the soil is a loamy sand over sand. The limiting deficits, Di, above which irrigation increased yields, were about 2·5 times greater at Rothamsted than at Woburn; this ratio approximates to the ratio of the water-holding capacities of the soils (– 0·1 to – 15 bar) to a depth of 1 m. The limiting deficits at Rothamsted were 80 mm for spring-sown field beans, 84 mm for main-crop potatoes, 100 mm for spring barley and 140 mm for spring and winter wheat. The responses to irrigation were not determined accurately as there were few years with a large response for any crop. However, the evidence is that the maximum response that could be expected for potatoes was 0·19 t/ha/mm water, and for grain dry matter of beans 0·006 t/ha/mm. The figure for potatoes agrees with that obtained by Penman at Woburn; the response of beans was much smaller at Rothamsted, partly because of severe attacks of broad bean stain virus.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Not Open Access |
| Additional information | FRENCH, BK (reprint author), ROTHAMSTED EXPTL STN,HARPENDEN AL5 2JQ,HERTFORDSHIRE,ENGLAND. |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:54 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:37 |
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