Projection of 21st century irrigation water requirements for sensitive agricultural crop commodities across the Czech Republic

2021 
Abstract This study quantified the crop water consumption, crop-specific irrigation requirements, and availability of water resources to catchments under climate change in the Czech Republic (CZ). Within the SoilClim model and BILAN-WATERES hydrological water balance modeling process, we tried to answer the question of whether there are at least theoretical water resources in the individual catchments of the CZ that could cover possible higher demands for irrigation. An ensemble of five global climate models under the moderate representative concentration pathway (RCP4.5) from the EURO-CORDEX initiative was chosen to project the future water use indicators. The irrigation water requirement indicators for the growing season (GS) of vineyards, hop gardens, orchards, vegetables, and fodder crops were calculated in 1143 catchments for two periods, 2031–2050 (Sc1) and 2061–2080 (Sc2), compared to the observed period 1961–2020 (Obs). To project irrigation scenarios in agricultural water management, the following water use indicators were quantified: relative soil moisture at 0–40 cm (AWR1) and 0–100 cm (AWR), crop water balance (Rain-ETa), irrigation water requirement (Irrig), and the ratio of actual and reference evapotranspiration (ETratio). To assess areas with a critically low water supply and quantify the frequency of water deficit during the GS of each crop, we calculated the number of days with extreme values of water use indicators. Quantification of the extreme irrigation characteristics reflected the highest depletion of soil moisture and the highest water demands, i.e., when the assessed indicators reached the 25th percentiles. For highly marketable vegetables, the largest deficit in Rain-ETa during the GS for Sc1 was projected. If current vegetable growing areas and cropping systems remain unchanged, Irrig will increase by 10.2% by the end of the 21st century under RCP4.5. Although current potato planting areas have soils with a high available water capacity, they will become controlled by the water deficit over the next few decades. The accumulated vineyard water required suggests that 15% and 25% of irrigation water will be lost by evaporation from the soil surface during the 2030s and 2080s, respectively. However, changes in future hopyard irrigation extent and amounts may have important implications in largely cropped irrigation hotspots. In the main traditional hop region for the 2030s, we project a 25% depletion of soil moisture and an increase of ETratio
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