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Arbuckle Area: Almond & Walnut Orchards 100 ac. +/- Almonds 100 ac., Independence on Viking planted in Nov. 2022 21 x 14 spacing, three legal parcels New well with everything new & district water 2 county roads frontage • Micro jet irrigation $2,750,000 119.5 ac. +/- Almonds 79.5 ac., Nonpareil, Fritz, Aldrich planted in 2004 & 2006, 21 x 14 spacing • Howards Walnuts 40 ac. planted in 2006, 22 x 13 spacing • Well & district water, county road frontage, drip irrigation $2,640,000 Buy together or separate
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MISCELLANEOUS
Kosana Suvocarev, assistant professor and Cooperative Extension specialist at University of California, Davis, is working with farmers to estimate water use by crops through use of remote-sensing data gathering and satellite technology.
agencies, the program offers grants for farmers to implement water conservation actions. Steps in- clude planting nonirrigated crops, using deficit irri- gation and fallowing fields. This year, Biagioni received grant funds through the program to plant nonirrigated corn. He also agreed to host monitoring equipment for related research by Kosana Suvocarev, an assistant professor and cooperative extension specialist in biometeo- rology at UC Davis. “If I know the amount of evapotranspiration and the hydrology of the soil, I can better time my irriga- tions and maybe I’ll need to irrigate less,” Biagioni said. “It is all beneficial information.” This summer, advanced instruments, which Suvocarev likened to “a weather station on steroids,” were erected above the rows of Biagioni’s corn field. The set-up continuously records weather data, including ET and wind speed. Carbon dioxide up- take by the plant and soil moisture are also recorded. Although this work is happening in 20 locations across the state, the site is one of six delta farms where Suvocarev and her team of students collect data to study various water conservation strategies affecting water budgets. “We are measuring in very nontypical conditions to see how we can improve the management of crops to avoid unnecessary losses of water to the at- mosphere,” Suvocarev said. “For the delta specifical- ly, because it is such a vulnerable hydrological knot of California, we need to see how to keep that water in the ground” and prevent saltwater intrusion. Suvocarev and her students measure the water loss of different crops and the carbon exchange between each crop and the atmosphere to eval- uate remote-sensing data products. OpenET, for example, is one of several online platforms that uses satellites to estimate water use by crops, and other plants and vegetation. “This super-pricey equipment (in the corn field) can be very difficult to maintain and install, and we cannot cover every ag field in the state, so we need to help better evaluate those estimates from satellites,” Conservation Continued from Page 1
she said. “Often, our measurements are the gold standard to be used to schedule irrigation amounts and timing for crops.” The satellite products, she said, offer “just an estimation; we do the true measurements from the ground.” Data collected at the delta farms, including at Biagioni’s corn field, are examined monthly, but Suvocarev said the information will be collected for three years. Three years of data will be more reliable and reflect different hydrological years, she said, adding, “especially differences in winter precipita- tion and how it impacts spring management.” “These data will help to inform remote sens- ing technologies like OpenET, which can be used by the state or individual growers to more accu- rately estimate consumptive water use on fields across California,” said Delta Conservancy Senior Environmental Scientist Rachel Wigginton. “This improved understanding of the effectiveness of dif- ferent water conservation practices will help us bet- ter understand the outcomes of the Delta Drought Response Pilot Program and could inform future responses to drought.” California Farm Bureau senior policy advocate Alexandra Biering said there is increased interest from state agencies and nonprofit groups to use re- mote-sensing products to monitor evapotranspira- tion and moisture content throughout California. “In recent years we’ve seen a handful of proposals to establishing a particular method or tool, such as OpenET, as the state or federal standard for collect- ing evapotranspiration data,” Biering said. “We sup- port farmers, irrigation districts and other agencies having the flexibility and freedom to choose the tools or products they want to use for monitoring evapo- transpiration in a way that gives them the best data. “More information is always better, so we’re look- ing forward to seeing how this project can help build a complete picture of ET that reflects the diversity of farming operations in California.” (Christine Souza is an assistant editor of Ag Alert. She may be contacted at csouza@cfbf.com.)
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October 4, 2023 Ag Alert 19
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