Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite
The renewed interest for water conservation and the productivity of resources directly follows the increasing water scarcity at the global scale. Modern technological applications are essential to diagnose how water is used and determine who the water users in river basin systems are. The competitio...
| Main Authors: | , , , |
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| Format: | Conference Paper |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
1999
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38397 |
| _version_ | 1855535606099083264 |
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| author | Bastiaanssen, Wim G.M. Chemin, Yann H. Ahmad, Mobin-ud-Din Asif, S. |
| author_browse | Ahmad, Mobin-ud-Din Asif, S. Bastiaanssen, Wim G.M. Chemin, Yann H. |
| author_facet | Bastiaanssen, Wim G.M. Chemin, Yann H. Ahmad, Mobin-ud-Din Asif, S. |
| author_sort | Bastiaanssen, Wim G.M. |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | The renewed interest for water conservation and the productivity of resources directly follows the increasing water scarcity at the global scale. Modern technological applications are essential to diagnose how water is used and determine who the water users in river basin systems are. The competition for water resources is most acutely experienced near river basin systems, where most citizens commonly live and work. Traditionally, irrigation water effectiveness is evaluated on the basis of flow rates through the main irrigation channels. This paper shows a method to compute consumptive use and soil water availability based on public domain satellite remote sensing data. The entire Indus River system is spatio-temporally modeled using a raster network based on National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration - Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (NOAA-AVHRR) data, at a spatial resolution of 1.1 km. The surface energy balance is the prime basis for calculations of evaporation and crop water stress, and thought to be more representative than canal discharge measurements to evaluate the management of all water resources. |
| format | Conference Paper |
| id | CGSpace38397 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 1999 |
| publishDateRange | 1999 |
| publishDateSort | 1999 |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace383972023-02-15T12:07:56Z Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite Bastiaanssen, Wim G.M. Chemin, Yann H. Ahmad, Mobin-ud-Din Asif, S. crop production evaporation satellite surveys remote sensing soil water water stress irrigation canals river basins water use efficiency irrigation water The renewed interest for water conservation and the productivity of resources directly follows the increasing water scarcity at the global scale. Modern technological applications are essential to diagnose how water is used and determine who the water users in river basin systems are. The competition for water resources is most acutely experienced near river basin systems, where most citizens commonly live and work. Traditionally, irrigation water effectiveness is evaluated on the basis of flow rates through the main irrigation channels. This paper shows a method to compute consumptive use and soil water availability based on public domain satellite remote sensing data. The entire Indus River system is spatio-temporally modeled using a raster network based on National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration - Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (NOAA-AVHRR) data, at a spatial resolution of 1.1 km. The surface energy balance is the prime basis for calculations of evaporation and crop water stress, and thought to be more representative than canal discharge measurements to evaluate the management of all water resources. 1999 2014-06-13T11:41:37Z 2014-06-13T11:41:37Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38397 en Limited Access Bastiaanssen, W. G. M.; Chemin, Y.; Ahmad, Mobin-ud -Din; Asif, S. 1999. Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite. Paper presented at the 2nd Inter-Regional Conference on Environment-Water 99. 11p. |
| spellingShingle | crop production evaporation satellite surveys remote sensing soil water water stress irrigation canals river basins water use efficiency irrigation water Bastiaanssen, Wim G.M. Chemin, Yann H. Ahmad, Mobin-ud-Din Asif, S. Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite |
| title | Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite |
| title_full | Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite |
| title_fullStr | Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite |
| title_full_unstemmed | Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite |
| title_short | Patterns of crop evaporation in the Indus Basin, recognized from the NOAA-AVHRR Satellite |
| title_sort | patterns of crop evaporation in the indus basin recognized from the noaa avhrr satellite |
| topic | crop production evaporation satellite surveys remote sensing soil water water stress irrigation canals river basins water use efficiency irrigation water |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38397 |
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