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SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:

SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

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Page 1: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SWE 604

Assignment :

CERES-Maize Model

By:

Page 2: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

INTRODUCTION

1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation, fertilizer, and other management practices.

2. Computer simulation models of the soil/crop/atmosphere system can make a valuable contribution to both furthering our understanding of the processes determining crop responses and predicting crop performance in different areas.

3. User-oriented simulation models facilitate the task of optimizing crop and nutrient management and can be used to investigate environmental and sustainability issues of agro-ecosystems.

4. Advances in climate science, climate monitoring, computer technology and information technology are combining to create new opportinities for provision of information.

5. The crop simulation model involves the dynamic simulation of multitude of shoots of various ages and how these grow and develop.

Page 3: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Agro-Climatology of the Maize Crop1- Maize is a warm-season annual crop. Suitable areas : where the average air temperature is from 20-30C for 4 consecutive months.

2- Planting of corn : Tave of air is approximately 10C and soil temp is near 13C. But optimal air and soil temperatures for germination are in the range of 20-25C.

3- Moisture stress during flowering causes greater yield reduction than temperature stress.

4- Greatest yield reduction due to water stress : during the silking stage. Because moisture stress postpones silking, pollen may be shed before silk appears. High temp. and high atm. moisture demand combined with low level of available soil moisture during tasseling and silking can cause reduction in yields an average of 5 percent per day.

5- Corn becomes extremely sensitive to any kind of stress during the tasseling and silking.

6- The rate of water use varies with the phenological state. It is from planting to 30cm height, 2.2 to 2.5 mm/day; at tasseling 4.0-5.0mm/day; reaching at kernel formation period, 5-6mm/day; and dropping at early maturity to 3.0-2mm/day respectively.

Page 4: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Phenological Stages of Maize

Establishment 15-25 days

Em

erge

nce

Vegetative 25-40 days

Flowering15-20 days

YieldFormation35-45days

MilkRipeness10-15days

Tassel

SilkTassel

P1 P5

9 Stages taken into account by the CERES-Maize Model:1)Sowing 6)End of Leaf Growth and 75% Silking2)Germination 7)Begining of Effective Grain Filling Period3)Seedling Emergence 8)End of Effective Filling Period4)End of Juvenile 9)Physiological Maturity5)Tassel Initiation

Page 5: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Soil-Plant-Water Relation Water content of plant tissue is mostly dependent on the magnitude of suction or tension in the various plant parts and the soil matrix. Whenever plant water content falls below its level of full turgidity, plant water stress occurs. Water stress can also be explained by introducing the concept of a free energy gradient. Movement of water from soil through the plant and into the atmosphere results from a free energy gradient. Water moves into the plant by the existence of a free energy gradient between the root and the soil matrix. If the turgidity of a plant lowers, the solute concentration becomes higher and its free energy decreases. Turgidity of a plant is determined by the transpiration rate. When the turgidity is decreased, the plant closes its stomata introducing a barrier to the loss of water. When the plant's leaf loses water, free energy for water in the leaf decreases relative to other parts of the plant, plant water content in the lower portion of the stem and root system moves to the point where the lower energy state exists. Under a non-turgid condition, water is transpired faster than it is taken up by the roots.

Page 6: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Description of Simulation Model

1- A model is a simplified representation of a system, a limited part of reality with well defined boundaries.

2- Simulation can also be described as a representation of behaviour of plant growth by a computer program.

3- Additionally, system simulation is to use dynamic modelling as a technique of dealing with plant processes.

4- A dynamic model is a model with time-indexable trajectory or structural behaviour. A set of mathematical equations describes a system in simulation studies. The status of the system is defined at every instant by a complement of state variables and its environment by a set of driving variables. simultaneous solution of this set of equations is carried out by the computer at every time step of the simulation process.

5- Agricultural researchers have realized that there is no way to fully describe the plant and its interactions with the environment in exact mathematical terms.

Page 7: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

1- Simulation has been used to study individual plant processes such as photosynthesis, stomatal action, and water uptake by roots.

2- Simulation of photosynthesis involves simulation of the energy received, absorbed and reflected, the temperature of system is based on an energy balance, the storage and transport of the photosynthetic product.

3- Stomatal action can also be simulated as a series of the interrelated processes of water transport to and from epidermis, water transport to and from guard cells, ion transport to and from the guard cells, and biochemical control processes occuring inside the guard cells. 4- Simulation of water uptake by roots involves the simulation of movement of water in the soil, the uptake by the root, and the transport through the plant system to the leaves.

Since the supply of water to the leaf has an effect on stomatal action, one can see that all three of these examples exhibit interactions and feedback.

Basic Physiological Principles of Simulation Models

Page 8: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

CERES MAIZE MODELIt is a USER OREINTED, daily incrementing Simulation model of maize Growth ,Development and Yield ( Jones and Kiniry1986)Two Versions1-Standard VersionSimulates the effect of Genotype ,Weather and Soil parameters on maize growth ,yield2- Nitrogen VersionSimulates soil and plant nitrogen dynamics and their effect on the crop

Page 9: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Flow Chart of CERES-MAIZE Model showing the Interactions between the Various Model Components

EVAPOTRANSPIRATION

PHOTOSYNTHESİS and RESPIRATION

SOIL-WATER BALANCE

GROWTH STAGE

LIGHT INTERCEPTION

WEATHER VARIABLES

GROWTH STAGE

CROP PARAMETERS

PARTITIONINGS

STEM GROWTH

GRAIN GROWTH

COB GROWTH

LEAF GROWTH

GRAIN NUMBER

ROOT GROWTH

Page 10: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

The model takes into account the following processes:

1. Phenological development as affected by Genetics and weather

2. Extension growth of leaves ,stems ,roots

3. Biomass accumulation and partitioning.

4. Soil water balance and water used by the crop.

5. Soil nitrogen uptake by the crops and partitioning among plant parts.

Page 11: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

The CERES-Maize model is designed to simulate the

effects of : Cultivars Planting density Weather Soil Water NitrogenOn crop growth and development

Page 12: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Limitations of the model

The following events are not considered by the model:

The effect of weeds Insect and diseases Nutrient deficiencies and

toxicities Extreme weather conditions like

floods and wind damage

Page 13: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Water Balance Method The CERES-Maize model uses the hydrological approach for estimating the soil-water balance. It calculates redistribution of water due to irrigation and rainfall, drainage, potential evapotranspiration, soil evaporation, and plant transpiration. Run-off is calculated by the U.S. Soil Conservation Service (SCS) curve number method. The water balance subroutine also accounts for the movement of upward flow and downward flow of soil water in the top 5 soil layers. Volumetric soil-water changes according to the movement of water in soil layers. The hydrologic or water balance method was stated by Rosenberg, et al., (1983): PI + SW ± RO - D - ET = 0 where, PI = the rainfall and/or irrigation.SW = the change in content of water stored in the soil.RO = the run-off.D = the percolation or deep drainage.ET = the evapotranspiration.

Page 14: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Review of Some INPUT Definitions-ISOIL-WATER STATUS, SW(L): It can be defined as the amount of plant available water within the soil-water system. Hillel (1972) noted that the soil-water system is an active system with a capacity to hold water and channels for water transport. Actual soil-water content for soil layer L is measured as volume fraction (cm³water/cm³ soil).

DRAINED UPPER LIMIT SOIL-WATER (or FIELD CAPACITY), DUL(L):

The soil-water content after the drainage of the gravitational water is called the "field capacity". It is also known as the upper limit of the water held in the soil. One third bar tension has been commonly used to define the moisture percentage to estimate the field capacity. Drained upper limit soil-water content for soil layer L is measured as volume fraction (cm³water/cm³ soil).

The wilting point is the soil-water content at which plants permanently wilt, (i.e can not recover even after water is added by natural causes or by irrigation). At the wilting point (or the permanent wilting percentage), the water is held in the soil against an extraction pressure of approximately 15 bars.The water held by the soil between the field capacity and the wilting point is considered as available or extractable water. Lower limit soil-water content for soil layer L is measured as volume fraction (cm³ water/cm³ soil).

LOWER LIMIT SOIL WATER(or WILTING POINT), LL(L):

Page 15: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Review of Some INPUT Definitions-II

The concept of degree days is accepted as a means to relate plant growth, development and maturity to temperature. This concept assumes that each plant has its own particular base or treshold temperature below which growth does not occur. The amount of heat accumulated during the day, as obtained by substracting the plant’s base temperature from the mean temperature for the day, is termed the degree day accumulation. Degree-days may be accumulated for a week, for a month, or until plant maturity is reached. Average Base Temperature for corn is between 8 and 10C.Growing Degree Days=((Max.Temp+Min.Temp)/2)-BaseTemp

GROWING DEGREE DAYS, P1, P5:

SWCON=(Porosity-DUL) / Porosity where, porosity is defined as Porosity= 1-(Bulk Density/2.65) . Bulk density is measured as g/cm³.

DRAINAGE RATE COEFFICIENT, SWCON:

Page 16: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Review of Some INPUT Definitions-III

If a radiation is allowed to fall simultaneously upon a black and a white surface, tha black surface absorbs most of the radiation, while the white surface reflects most of the radiation. Albedo is the fraction of the total incident solar radiation that is reflected back into space without absorption. The emissivity of any real substance is between 0 and 1, and may vary with wavelength. Albedo of blackbody is 0, but a new-fallen snow is 0.9. Blackbody radiation is isotropic; i.e, the radiance is independent of direction. Albedo can be described in terms of organic matter(%) and soil texture of uppermost layer.Organic Matter Soil Texture Albedo >10 all 0.08 5-10 all 0.11 2-5 all 0.13 <2 silt loam, silt 0.14 <2 fine sandy loam 0.15 <2 fine sand, very fine sand 0.19

SOIL ALBEDO, SALB:

Page 17: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Review of Some INPUT Definitions-IVROOT DISTRIBUTION WEIGHTING FACTOR, WR(L):

WR(L)=exp(-4 * ZL /200) where ZL is depth(cm) to centre of the soil layer.

PHOTOPERIOD SENSITIVITY COEFFICIENT, P2: The relative sensitivity of Maize to daylength(hour) at which developmental progress occurs, is observed and recorded. P2 is the slope of the curve with x axis showing day length(hour) from 11 to 19 and y axis showing relative sensitivity from 0 to 1.

Runoff is the water which is not absorbed by the soil and flows to lower ground, eventually draining into a stream, river. Example of runoff curve numbers from National Engineering Handbook, USDA, Hydrology Section 4,1972:LAND USE TREATMENT HYDROLOGIC HYDROLOGIC SOIL GROUP (PRACTICE) CONDITION A B C D Row Crops Straight row poor 72 81 88 91 good 67 78 85 89 Terraced poor 66 74 80 82 good 62 71 78 81Where A:high permeability, B:Moderate permeability, C:Slow permeability and D:Poorly drained;clay soils with high swelling potential; permanent high water table.

RUNOFF CURVE NUMBER, CN2:

Page 18: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Review of Some Definitions of Simulated Variables

LEAF AREA INDEX, LAI:

The planimeter is the most accurate (0.76% relative mean square error per leaf) although not the quickest in its time req. (90seconds/corn leaf).The photometric is the quickest(35 seconds /corn leaf), but not so accurate (2.44% RMSE per leaf).

LAI=(m² LeafArea/m² FieldArea)

POTENTIAL (maximal) EVAPOTRANSPIRATION, EO:

EO is a measure of the ability of the atmosphere to remove water from the surface through the processes of evaporation and transpiration assuming no limitation on water supply. Actual evapotranspiration under non-water-stress condition defined as the maximal evapotranspiration (mm/day).

ET is the amount of water that is actually removed from a surface due to the processes of evaporation and transpiration. Under water stress condition, water stress coefficient is introduced to account for the influence of water status in root zone upon evapotranspiration (mm/day). ET= Ks * EO where Ks is the water stress coefficient.

ACTUAL (reference) EVAPOTRANSPIRATION, ET:

Page 19: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

The CERES-Maize model uses 2 data input files

1st file : Parameter input file 2nd file : daily weather file

PARAMETER INPUT FILEIt is used to assign values to the variable

that control the input execution and output.

Line 1: Title or name of the treatment.Line 2: Details of input and output (DOS,

plant population)Line 3: Genetic information for the cultivar.Line 4: Silking date, grain yield etc.Line 5: General soil information for whole

profile.

Page 20: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Soil Layer Information

Line 6 :Information regarding individual soil layers one line per layer

DLAYR: Thickness of the layer (cm) LL : Lower limit of plant extractable

water (cm/cm) DUL : Drained upper limit (cm/cm) SAT : Water content at saturation (cm/cm) WR : Weighting factor for root

distribution SW : Initial water content

Page 21: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

THE PARAMETER INPUT FILE (param1.txt)

1. The first five lines of this parameter file contain five types of values including switches, control numbers, management inputs, initial conditions, and field measured values.

2. The measured values are used to make comparison with values predicted by the model.

3. The switches control whether particular sections and subroutines of the model are accessed during the program run.

4. The frequency of the output is determined by the output control numbers.

5. Initialization values such as sowing date, initial plant population, and irrigation dates (and amounts) are done by management inputs.

Page 22: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Description of Values Used in the Parameter Input File of the CERES-Maize Model(param1.txt)

"MISSOURI, SW=DUL"121 4.00 5.00 38.49 1.0 7 0 1.0 1"B73 X MO17" 220.0 0.520 880.0 730.0 10.00 0.14 10.0 0.13 82.0 000 000 0.0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.010.0 .199 .400 .445 1.00 0.00018.0 .172 .412 .439 0.68 0.00010.0 .171 .415 .441 0.52 0.00023.0 .217 .325 .382 0.37 0.00023.0 .201 .311 .374 0.23 0.00016.0 .178 .291 .362 0.16 0.00030.0 .164 .304 .356 0.10 0.00015.0 .165 .306 .357 0.06 0.00000.0

Page 23: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Description of Values Used in the Parameter Input File (param1.txt) (Continued-1)

Variable EXPLANATIONS VALUES USED---------------------------------------------------- LINE 1 ----------------------------------------------TITLE Title of treatment to be simulated MISSOURI, SW=DUL---------------------------------------------------- LINE 2 ----------------------------------------------ISOW Sowing date(day of year) ......................................... 121PLANTS Plant population(plants/m) ...................................... 4.00SDEPTH Sowing depth(cm) ..................................................... 5.00LAT Latitude of location(degree) .................................... 38.49 KOUTWA Frequency in days of water balance output .......... 1.0KOUTGR Frequency in days of growth output ..................... 7IIRR Switch or device number describing irrrigation ... 0 00:No irrigation is applied, 0 to 1:Irrigation is applied as specified by user, >1:Irrigation is automatically applied.INSOIL Indicator for initial soil water ................................... 1.00 0.00:set to lower limit(LL), 1.00:Set to drained upper limit(DUL), 0.00<INSOIL<1.0:set to LL+INSOIL*(DUL-LL), 1.00<INSOIL:Initial soil water input by userISWSWB Switch for water balance .......................................... 1 00:Water balance not used, 01:water balance used

Page 24: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Description of Values Used in the Parameter Input File (param1.txt) (Continued-2)

Variable EXPLANATIONS VALUES USED---------------------------------------------------- LINE 3 ----------------------------------------------NAME Cultivar name ................................................................ B73 X MO17---------------------------------------------------- LINE 4 ----------------------------------------------P1 Growing Degree Days from seedling emergence to the end of the juvenile phase (C day, base: 8C) ......... 220.0P2 Photoperiod sensitivity coefficient ................................... 0.520P5 Growing Degree Days from silking to physiological maturity (C day, base: 8C) ............................................ 880.0G2 Potential kernel number (kernels/plant) ........................... 730.0G3 Potential kernel growth rate(mg kernel/day) ................... 10.00SALB Soil albedo (unitless) ......................................................... 0.14U Upper Limit of stage 1 soil evaporation (mm) ................ 10.0SWCON Whole profile drainage rate coefficient ........................... 0.13CN2 Runoff curve number used to calculate daily runoff ..... 82.0

Page 25: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Description of Values Used in the Parameter Input File (param1.txt) (Continued-3)

Variable EXPLANATIONS VALUES USED---------------------------------------------------- LINE 5 ----------------------------------------------ISLKJD Measured 50% silking date(day of year) .......................... 000MATJD Measured physiological maturity date (day of year) ....... 000XYIELD Measured grain yield (kg/ha at 15.5% moisture).............. 000000XGRWT Measured kernel dry weight at maturity (gr/kernel) ........ 0000XGPSM Measured grain number at maturity (grains/m²) ............. 00000 XGPE Measured grain number at maturity (grains/ear) ............ 0000XLAI Measured maximum leaf area index (m²/m²) ................... 0000XBIOM Maximum above-ground biomass at maturity (kg/ha)..... 000000---------------------------------------------------- LINE 6 THROUGH 10 --------------------------DLAYR:Layer thickness (cm)LL(L) :Lower limit of plant-extractable soil water content in layer L as volume fraction DUL(L):Drained upper limit soil water content in layer L as volume fraction SAT(L):Soil water content at saturation in layer L as volume fractionSW(L) :Actual soil water content in layer L -volume fraction(i.e. cm³water/cm³ soil).WR(L) :Weighting factor for soil depth L to determine new root growth distribution

Page 26: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

Weather Input File

Daily weather data read by the main program.

One line of the data is used for each day .The first 7 columns of each line are used as an identification field or comment field.

IYR : YearJDATE : Day of the yearTEMPMAX : Maximum air

temperatureTEMPMIN : Minimum air

temperatureSOLRAD : Solar RadiationRAIN : Precipitation

Page 27: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

THE WEATHER INPUT FILE

YR DAY SOLRAD TMAXC TMINC RAIN(mm)79 121 595 11.7 4.4 0.379 122 597 24.4 6.7 0.079 123 600 19.4 13.9 19.379 124 603 17.2 11.1 1.379 125 606 16.1 8.3 0.079 126 609 21.7 3.9 0.079 127 611 27.2 9.4 0.079 128 614 31.1 15.6 0.079 129 617 32.2 19.4 0.079 130 619 29.4 18.9 0.079 131 622 30.0 12.8 13.279 132 624 14.4 8.3 14.2...

Page 28: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

FERTILIZAER INPUTJFDAY : Each line contains the day of the

year.AFERT : Amount of the elemental N

applied.DFERT : Depth of incorporation.IFTYE : Type of fertilizer N applied.One line is used for each application of N

fertilizer.After the last line of Fertilizer information

added , a line with JFDAY set equal to zeroZero is necessary to signal the end of

fertilizer data If no fertilizer is used ,zeros are entered for

the day of the year.

Page 29: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

BIOMASS OUTPUT FILE Written in subroutine ( OUTGRO) Output control number (KOUTGR) in the

parameter file defines the interval at which output is written (OBIO.DAT)

The following is written in the file: Day of the year: The number of the leaves plant has produced: LAI: Root weight ( g/plant): Stem weight ( g/plant): Grain weight ( g/plant): Leaf weight ( g/plant): Root Depth ( cm): Root length density (cm root/cm3 soil) in the

five soil layers

Page 30: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SOIL WATER OUTPUT FILE

The following information are written Day of the year Plant transpiration (EP.mm) Evapotarnspiration (ET.mm) Potential ET (E0 .mm) Solar radiation (SR,cal/cm3) Maximum and Minimum temp. (Tmax & Tmin) Total precipitation

The Volumetric soil water content in each soil layer( L1-L5)

The total plant-extractable soil water in the soil profile (PESW.cm) are printed for the day of the output.

Page 31: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SOIL NITROGEN OUTPUT FILE

The following data are printed Day of the year. Total immobilization of mineral nitrogen. Mineralization of nitrogen from the fresh organic pool. Mineralization of nitrogen from the humus nitrogen pool (average daily amount for the period). The concentration of elemental Nitrogen ( g/mg) as nitrate and ammonium are written for the top five soil layers.

Page 32: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

MODEL INPUTSSimple methods for estimating soil and genetic

variables

SOIL WATER INPUTSOIL ALBEDO (SALB)SALAB = 0.1 for dry, dark soils with OMSALAB = 0.3 for light desert sandsStage I .Soil Evaporation (U) Coefficient6 mm :In sands and heavy shrinking soils9 mm :In loams12mm : In clay loamsDrainage coefficient (SWCON)(SWCON) is calculated from each soil layer (L) from porosity

(Po(L)) and drained upper limit ( DUL(L)) of each layer.Po(L) = 1- BD(L)/2.65SWCON(l) =( PO(L)) - DUL(L)/PO(L)Where,BD(L) : moist bulk density of the layer. : 2.65 is the approximate particle density.

Page 33: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SOIL WATER CONTENT(SAT)

Water content at saturation (SAT)SAT can be calculated atDrained upper limit ( DUL)Drained lower limit ( LL) of plant extractable water SAT(LL) is calculated for each layer upto 2m,by

allowing a well developed maize crop to extract water from a plastic cover plot until it is at the point of death due to stress.

ROOT DISTRIBUTION WEIGHTING FACTOR( WR) Used to estimate the relative root growth in all

soil layers WR( I ) = Exp ( -4*Z( I )/200)

where, WR( I ) = 1.0 in the top layer of the soil Z( I ) = is the depth ( cm ) to the center of the

layer I.

Page 34: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

GENETIC INPUTSP1 : GDD ( base 8ºC) Emergence- Juvenile

[110-335]

P2 : Photoperiod sensitivity coefficient ( I/hr) 0-0.8

P5 : GDD from silking to Physiol. maturity 685

G2 : Potential kernel number ( kernel /plant) 560-834

G5 : Potential kernel growth rate ( mg/kernel ) 6-11mg

Mean Temp. during grain filling = 20-30 ºC

Page 35: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINE STRUCTUREThe CERES-Maize model is divided into :1- Main program2- SubroutineMain Program : (i) Opens input & output files(ii) Calls Sub-routines-PROGR1 & SOILR1PROGR1 : reads the programme title and first five lines of

the parameter file : It also initilizes parameters ( variables)

Main Program : enters a daily loop: 1 - It reads the year ( IYR)

2 - It reads the day of year( JDATE)

3 - It reads the solar radiation (SOLARD) 4 - It reads the Max air temp. (TEMPMX) 5 - It reads the Min air temp (TEMPMN) 6 - It reads the pricipitation (RAIN)

Page 36: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINECALDAT : Calculates the month and day of

the year from JDATEWATBAL : Simulates soil water balance.PHENOL : Calculates the rate of plant

development.GROSUB : is called if the crop is growing

( crop growth rate is less than 6).WRITE : called to write daily climate, soil

water, and crop growth data.The model returns to beginning of daily loop.

SUBROUTINE PROG IMain program calls it on first day of

simulation:: It reads first 5 lines of parameter file and

READ irrig. data: Produces headings for the OUTPUT file and

initiate the variables.

Page 37: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINE SOILR1

:Reads from the parameter file for any No. of soil layers ( NLAYR) up to 10.

: Lower limit of plant-extractable soil ware( LL): Drained upper limit ( DUL): Soil water content at saturation ( SAT): Root Growth weighting factor (WR): Initial soil water content (SW)INSOIL : Initial Soil Water , if INSOIL is > 0 :SW( NLAYER) is read from parameter file. if INSOIL is ≤ 0 Calculates initial soil water SW(NLAYER) = LL( NLAYER)+(DUL(NLAYER)-

LL(NLAYER)*INSOILInitial SW may be set higher than that given by previous

eq’n because crops rarely extract all plant water available below 110cm.

SWR: Real amount of plant extractable soil water is calculated from any layer (I)

SWR = ( SW (I)-LL ( I ))/ DUL ( I ) – LL ( L)

Page 38: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SWR is used to initialize SUMES2 SUMES 2 : cumulative stage 2 soil Evaporation.If SWR < 0.9 SUMES2 = 25 -27.8 * SWRSUMES I = U = cumu. stage I Soil Evaporation.SUMES I = Cumulative Soil Evaporation. in stage

1 ( mm)The upper limit of stage 1 evaporation. and the

time after the begining of step 2

Evaporation ( T ) = ( SUMES 2 /3.5 ) ** 2If SWR ≥ 0.9 ,SUMES 2 & T are set to 0SUMS 1 = 100 – 100 * SWRSubroutine calculates initial values the upper ( DLI ) and

lower ( DL2) depthCalculates plant-extractable soil ware ( ESW(L)) for each

layer.ESW ( L ) = DUL ( L ) – LL ( L )The subroutine wrires DL 1, DL 2, LL ( L )SAT ( L ) ,ESW ( L) , SW ( L ) and WR ( L ) on the output

file OYLD.DAT

Page 39: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

CUMDEP : Cumulative depth of profile.TSW : Total Soil water in the profile.TPESW : Total plant-extractable soil water in the profile.

TLL : Total soil water in the profile at the lower limit of plant extractable water ( TLL )

TDUL : Total soil water in the profile at the drained upper limit

TSAT : Total soil water in the profile at saturation is calculated.

WF( L ) : Weighting factor WF ( L ) is used to determine runoff.

WX = 1.016 * ( 1- Exp ( -4.16 * CUMDEP/DEPMAX))

W F( L ) = WX – XX where, XX = 0 in the surface layer and in other layers, XX = WX in the layers

above.

Page 40: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

CUMDEP : cumulative depth of the soil profile ( cm )

RTDEP : The depth of rooting DEPMAX : Maximum depth of root zone

( mm )

The following total values for the profile are written to the output file ( OYLD.DAT):

RTDEP , TLL, TDUL , TSAT, TPESW, TSW.

Page 41: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINE WATBAL

It is called daily by the main program if the soil water switch( ISWSWB )≠ 0

Its principal functions are to calculate the redistribution of water due to irrigation, precip, Drainage , PET, Soil evaporation and plant evaporation ( transpiration).

It also contains calculation of potential soil evapotranspiration.

Page 42: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINE WETBALCalculates pot.evaporation,PET soilTD = 0.6 * TEMPMAX + 0.4 *TEMPMNWhere, TD : Day time mean temp when both soil

and plant Evaporation are greatest.ALBEDO : The integrated crop and soil albedo is

calculated from base soil albedo ( SALB) and LAI.

If the crop is not growing :ALBEDO = SALB If the crop is growing :ALBEDO = 0.23 –( 0.23 – SALAB ) * Exp ( -0.75 *

LAI) The equilibrium evaporation rate ( EEQ ) is

calculated from SOLRAD , ALEBDO & TDEEQ = SOLARAD * ( 2.O4 E-4 -1.83E-

4*ALBEDO)*( TD+29)PET( EO) is estimated as a function of TEMPMXEO = EEQ * 1.1 If 5 ºC <TEMPMAX <

35 ºC

Page 43: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

IF TEMPMAX > 35 ºC :

E0 = EEQ * (( TEMPMAX – 35 )*0.05 +1.1)

IF TEMPMAX < 5.0 ºC :

E0 = EEQ * 0.01 * Exp ( 0.18 * ( TEMPMAX + 20 ))POTENTIAL RATE OF SOIL Evap.

(EOS)When LAI < 1.0 ,

EOS = EO * ( 1- 0.43* LAI )

When LAI > 1.0 , EOS = EO /1.1 * Exp ( -0.4 * LAI )

Page 44: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINE PHENOL Called by the main programme on the day of the

sowing until the crop is mature It uses temperature , photoperiod and gemetic characteristic to determine the date the crop begins a new growth stage. It calls subroutine PHASE 1

SUBROUTINE PHASE 1 Called by subroutine PHENOL When the crop completes a growth stage ( ISTAGE) Initializes the variables ISTAGE is uploaded each time subroutine PHASE1 is called. Several important variables are calculated within subroutine

Page 45: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINE GROSUB - Called from the main programme. - Calculates leaf area development , light interception and portioning of biomass into various plant parts.

SUBROUTINE OUTWACalled by subroutine WRITE specified by the variable in the parameter file.Calls CALDAT and writes soil-water related output to the file OWAT.DAT

SUBROUTINE WRITECalled daily from the MAIN programme.Calculates cumulative variables related to hydrology and calls the output subroutine OUTWA and OUTGR respectively.

Page 46: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUBROUTINE OUTGR

1- Called by subroutine WRITE at the interval specified by the variable KOUTGR in the parameter file. 2- Calls subroutine CALDAT and writes growth related output to the output file .

SUBROUTINE SOILNI In the N version, it is called from main

program on the first day of simulation. Fertilizer data are read from parameter file. N content of STRAW and ROOT residue are

calculated from the weight of residues and their C/N

ratio from the parameters file on the assumption that 40% of dry weight

is carbon.

Page 47: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

GENERAL OUTPUT FILE

General Output File Title of the experiment

Years in which the program starts

Cultivars name

Plant population

Genetics coefficients

Page 48: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

The General Output File (OYLD.DAT) Generated by the CERES-Maize Model

The general output file prints:

1- Information about management and soil characteristics contained in the parameter input file.

2- All water contents are in volumetric fractions.

3- The date for each phenological event is listed including the simulated dates of silking and physiological maturity.

4- These yield and growth information are presented:Grain yield (kg/ha at 15.5% water content), dry single kernel weight (g/kernel), grain number (grains/m² and grains/ear), maximum leaf area index, and the final above-ground biomass (kg/ha).

Page 49: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

The Biomass Output File (OBIO.DAT) (continued-1)

CERES MAIZE BIOMASS OUTPUT SUMMARY"MISSOURI, SW=DUL"DAY LEAF LAI ----- ORGAN WEIGHT ------ROOT -ROOT LENGTH DENSITY-- NO. ROOT STEM EAR LEAF DPTH L1 L2 L3 L4 L5--- ---- m2/m2 -------- g/plant -------- cm ---cmRoot/cm3Soil-----135 4 0.01 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 27 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0142 6 0.09 1.3 0.0 0.0 0.8 44 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.0149 8 0.19 4.6 0.0 0.0 2.2 57 1.1 0.4 0.5 0.1 0.0156 10 0.41 12.0 0.0 0.0 5.6 75 2.7 1.0 1.3 0.3 0.1163 12 0.89 25.3 0.5 0.0 14.3 97 5.0 2.0 2.8 0.8 0.3170 15 1.54 45.4 5.3 0.0 28.4 120 4.9 4.1 5.0 1.8 0.9177 18 2.11 67.7 23.6 0.0 42.0 145 4.8 5.0 5.0 3.4 2.0184 20 2.41 92.2 51.0 0.0 49.4 145 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.7 2.9191 23 2.48 116.8 63.7 0.0 54.6 145 4.8 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.4198 23 2.16 132.0 69.4 0.0 54.6 145 4.6 4.9 4.9 4.9 4.9205 23 1.57 129.4 60.1 13.0 54.6 145 4.6 4.8 4.8 4.8 4.9212 23 1.29 127.1 56.2 40.7 54.0 145 5.0 5.0 4.8 4.8 4.8219 23 1.25 127.0 64.2 77.4 54.0 145 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.6 4.6226 23 0.89 122.7 50.3 95.2 53.5 145 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.6 4.6233 23 0.62 118.4 49.7 95.2 51.6 145 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.6 4.6240 23 0.43 114.4 49.7 95.2 49.9 145 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.6 4.6

Page 50: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

The Soil-Water Output File (OWAT.DAT) Generated by the CERES-Maize Model

The model includes the calculations for the water balance to be written into the soil-water output file, OWAT.DAT, if the switch, ISWSWB, is set to a value larger than zero in the parameter file. This file contains day of the year, plant transpiration (EP, mm), evapotranspiration (ET, mm/day), potential evapotranspiration (EO, mm /day), solar radiation (SR, langley), maximum and minimum temperatures (TMAX and TMIX in C), total precipitation (PRECIP, mm/day), the volumetric soil-water content of the top five soil layers (L1-L5), and the total plant extractable soil-water in the whole soil profile (PESW, cm). The output control number, KOUTWA, in the parameter file determines the output’s interval written to OWAT.DAT. Here, an example of OWAT.DAT:

CERES MAIZE SOIL-WATER OUTPUT SUMMARY"MISSOURI, SW=DUL"DAY -- AVERAGE ------------- ---VOLUMET SOIL WATER--- TOTAL EP ES ET EO SR TMAX TMIN PRCPT DRN RNF L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 PESW

---mm/day ---- LY ---- C ---- MM MM MM --cm³Water/cm3Soil------ CM121 0.0 4.4 4.4 4.4 595 11.7 4.4 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.42 0.39 0.32 0.35 0.31 21.5122 0.0 5.4 5.4 5.4 597 24.4 6.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.40 0.35 0.32 0.36 0.32 21.0123 0.0 5.4 5.4 5.4 600 19.4 13.9 19.3 0.0 12.5 0.39 0.35 0.32 0.36 0.33 21.1124 0.0 4.2 4.2 5.2 603 17.2 11.1 1.3 0.0 0.0 0.37 0.34 0.32 0.36 0.33 20.8125 0.0 2.4 2.4 5.0 606 16.1 8.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.36 0.33 0.32 0.36 0.33 20.6126 0.0 1.4 1.4 5.2 609 21.7 3.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.35 0.32 0.31 0.36 0.33 20.4

Page 51: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

The General Output File(OYLD.DAT) Generated by the CERES-Maize Model(Continued-1)

CERES MAIZE GENERAL OUTPUT SUMMARYProgram Begins Day :121 Project Name:MISSOURI,SW=DULPopulation(plants/m2):4.0 Cultivar :"B73 X MO17" P1:220.0 P5:880.0 P2:0.52 G2:730.0 G3:10.0SALB:0.14 U:10.0 SWCON:0.13 CN2:82.0

Soil Layer LL DUL SAT ESW SW WR Depth(cm) -----------(cmWater/cm3soil)------------ 0.0- 10.0 0.199 0.400 0.445 0.201 0.400 1.000 10.0- 28.0 0.172 0.412 0.439 0.240 0.412 0.680 28.0- 38.0 0.171 0.415 0.441 0.244 0.415 0.520 38.0- 61.0 0.217 0.325 0.382 0.108 0.325 0.370 61.0- 84.0 0.201 0.311 0.374 0.110 0.311 0.230 84.0-100.0 0.178 0.291 0.362 0.113 0.291 0.160100.0-130.0 0.164 0.304 0.356 0.140 0.304 0.100130.0-145.0 0.165 0.306 0.357 0.141 0.306 0.060TotalProfile: 26.7 48.6 56.0 21.9 48.6IRRIGATION (mm):NO IRRIGATION WAS APPLIED

Page 52: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

MODEL EVALUATION Development ,Verification and Validation of

CERES-Maize model is an iterative process. Measured & Simulated results are composed. Comparison of measured results with simulated

results, give logical errors and inadequate calibration.

Input errors are more serious than logical.

Common Input Errors1. In accurate estimates of initial soil water

content2. The lower limit of plant-extractable water

(LL)3. The drained upper limit ( DUL)4. Inaccurate estimates of rooting depth

due to restrictions

Page 53: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

YIELD SIMULATION

Simulated yields are sensitive to LL , DUL and initial soil water when yields are limited due to water stress.

Model is less sensitive to these input parameters when rainfall or irrigation is abundant.

Page 54: SWE 604 Assignment : CERES-Maize Model By:. INTRODUCTION 1. Many soil, climatic, plant, and management factors affect the way a crop will respond to irrigation,

SUMMARY & CONCLUSIONS

1- The CERES-Maize model provided very useful information about the plant-soil-water status.

2- The CERES-Maize model simulates the soil-water status through

estimation of evaporation from the soil, transpiration from the plants, run-off from the soil surface, and drainage from the bottom of the soil profile.

3- It is recommended that further research focus on the verification of the estimates of biological performance by the model.

4- This calibration should compare simulated yield with actual measurements of growth stages, leaf area index and root growth.

5- Plant growth simulation needs to be improved in the CERES-Maize model for obtaining a better information about partitioning of the photosynthate during the different stages of development and under varying temperature and water stress.