Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California

Since 2011, California has been under drought conditions. These conditions have not only affected water availability for farmers, but also production. California’s second most valuable crop, almonds, has been affected by drought conditions. This study used three models (Model 1-3) to describe almond...

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Main Author: Serrano, Dafne Isaac
Format: Others
Published: DigitalCommons@CalPoly 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1955
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3303&context=theses
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spelling ndltd-CALPOLY-oai-digitalcommons.calpoly.edu-theses-33032020-07-15T07:09:31Z Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California Serrano, Dafne Isaac Since 2011, California has been under drought conditions. These conditions have not only affected water availability for farmers, but also production. California’s second most valuable crop, almonds, has been affected by drought conditions. This study used three models (Model 1-3) to describe almond yield variability from year to year and almond yield variability within a year in Kern County, CA. The study evaluated 185 almond farms that were classified in three locations (east side, west side and north west side). The years of the study were 2011 (wet year) and 2013-2015 (drought condition years). Model 1 determined a functional regression between almond yield and annual evapotranspiration during the 4 years of the study. The R2was 7.9%, meaning low association between both variables and high unexplained variability (92.1%). Model 2 evaluated year to year variation. A regression function between almond yield and annual evapotranspiration after adjusting for location, precipitation, chilling hours and year was made. The R2of this model 62.6%, and all the variables used had a p2was higher than Model 1; however, there was high unexplained variability (47.4%). Model 3 evaluated within-year variation. A regression function between almond yield and annual evapotranspiration after adjusting for tree age and location (east, west and northwest side) was made for each year (2011 and 2013 -2015). Coefficient of variation of evapotranspiration and soil available water storage were analyzed as additional variables in Model 3; however, they were not introduced in Model 3 due to the low increase in R2 in each year (2 of Model 3 for each year were, 60.4%, 49.7%, 53.8% and 53.2% for the years 2011, 2013-2015, respectively. Model 3 also had high unexplained almond yield variability in each year (39.6%-50.3%). This high unexplained variability leads to introduce additional variables to the functional regression model for further studies. Identifying these additional variables and having a functional regression model with high R2 would lead to understand howlow evapotranspiration could potentially lead to a positive response on yield in drought conditions; thus, making farmers improve water use efficiency and hence, lowering production cost. However, the high unexplained variability clearly indicates that evapotranspiration is only one of many factors that influence yield. If improved yield is an important outcome, future studies must examine large- scale almond-producing farms with multiple agricultural system variables. 2018-10-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1955 https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3303&context=theses Master's Theses and Project Reports DigitalCommons@CalPoly Evapotranspiration tree age drought condition year wet year coefficient of variation of evapotranspiration chilling hours and almonds. Agronomy and Crop Sciences Fruit Science Horticulture Plant Biology Plant Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Evapotranspiration
tree age
drought condition year
wet year
coefficient of variation of evapotranspiration
chilling hours and almonds.
Agronomy and Crop Sciences
Fruit Science
Horticulture
Plant Biology
Plant Sciences
spellingShingle Evapotranspiration
tree age
drought condition year
wet year
coefficient of variation of evapotranspiration
chilling hours and almonds.
Agronomy and Crop Sciences
Fruit Science
Horticulture
Plant Biology
Plant Sciences
Serrano, Dafne Isaac
Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California
description Since 2011, California has been under drought conditions. These conditions have not only affected water availability for farmers, but also production. California’s second most valuable crop, almonds, has been affected by drought conditions. This study used three models (Model 1-3) to describe almond yield variability from year to year and almond yield variability within a year in Kern County, CA. The study evaluated 185 almond farms that were classified in three locations (east side, west side and north west side). The years of the study were 2011 (wet year) and 2013-2015 (drought condition years). Model 1 determined a functional regression between almond yield and annual evapotranspiration during the 4 years of the study. The R2was 7.9%, meaning low association between both variables and high unexplained variability (92.1%). Model 2 evaluated year to year variation. A regression function between almond yield and annual evapotranspiration after adjusting for location, precipitation, chilling hours and year was made. The R2of this model 62.6%, and all the variables used had a p2was higher than Model 1; however, there was high unexplained variability (47.4%). Model 3 evaluated within-year variation. A regression function between almond yield and annual evapotranspiration after adjusting for tree age and location (east, west and northwest side) was made for each year (2011 and 2013 -2015). Coefficient of variation of evapotranspiration and soil available water storage were analyzed as additional variables in Model 3; however, they were not introduced in Model 3 due to the low increase in R2 in each year (2 of Model 3 for each year were, 60.4%, 49.7%, 53.8% and 53.2% for the years 2011, 2013-2015, respectively. Model 3 also had high unexplained almond yield variability in each year (39.6%-50.3%). This high unexplained variability leads to introduce additional variables to the functional regression model for further studies. Identifying these additional variables and having a functional regression model with high R2 would lead to understand howlow evapotranspiration could potentially lead to a positive response on yield in drought conditions; thus, making farmers improve water use efficiency and hence, lowering production cost. However, the high unexplained variability clearly indicates that evapotranspiration is only one of many factors that influence yield. If improved yield is an important outcome, future studies must examine large- scale almond-producing farms with multiple agricultural system variables.
author Serrano, Dafne Isaac
author_facet Serrano, Dafne Isaac
author_sort Serrano, Dafne Isaac
title Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California
title_short Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California
title_full Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California
title_fullStr Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Evapotranspiration Rate on Almond Yield in California
title_sort effect of evapotranspiration rate on almond yield in california
publisher DigitalCommons@CalPoly
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1955
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3303&context=theses
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