Irrigation Channels (irrigation + channel)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


A reference model approach to performance monitoring of control loops with applications to irrigation channels

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADAPTIVE CONTROL AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, Issue 10 2005
P. Zhang
Abstract In this paper a new method for detection of oscillatory and sluggish controllers is developed. The method is aimed at control systems where rejection of measured load disturbances is the main control objective, and it is based on comparing the actual system output with the output of a reference model. A number of performance indicators are defined taking the most important factors from a control perspective into consideration. Based on the performance indicators, the performance of the control loops is evaluated. The developed method has been successfully applied to real data from an irrigation channel. The method correctly detected the control loops which needed retuning, and it provided useful information about several aspects of the control performance such as speed of response, oscillations and interactions between control loops. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Risk assessment of Magnacide® H herbicide at Río Colorado irrigation channels (Argentina). tier 3: Studies on native species

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2007
Andrés Venturino
Abstract We evaluated the potential environmental risk of the herbicide Magnacide® (Baker Petrolite, TX, USA) using native species from Argentina, representing the ecosystem at the Irrigation Corporation (CORFO) channels at the Colorado River mouth, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Six species including fish, toads, snails, crustaceans, and insects were selected to perform studies on acute toxicity and repeated exposure effects. Magnacide H susceptibility ranking was Bufo arenarum (lethal concentration 50 [LC50] = 0.023 mg/L), Onchorhynchus mykiss (LC50 = 0.038 mg/L), Heleobia parchappii (LC50 = 0.21 mg/L), Hyalella curvispina (LC50 = 0.24 mg/L), Simulium spp. (LC50 = 0.60 mg/L), and Chironomus spp. (LC50 = 2.83 mg/L). The risk limit of 10th percentile (0.013 mg/L) determined by probit analysis on sensitivity distribution was similar to the one calculated from literature data. Risk assessment based on field application data suggested lethal exposures for more than 70 to 90% of the species up to 20 km downstream from the application point. Repeated exposures to Magnacide H of amphibian larvae at the lowest-observed-effect concentration caused some effects during the first exposure, but without cumulative effects. Amphipods were insensitive to repeated exposures, showing no cumulative effects. Whether short-term exposures may result in long-term sublethal effects on the organism's life history was not addressed by these laboratory tests. In conclusion, tier 3 studies indicate that Magnacide H application schedule is extremely toxic for most native species at CORFO,Río Colorado channels, representing a high potential risk in the environment. The real environmental impact must be addressed by field studies at tier 4 giving more information on population effects and communities. [source]


Single and multigrain quartz-luminescence dating of irrigation-channel features in Santa Fe, New Mexico

GEOARCHAEOLOGY: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 4 2009
Glenn W. Berger
Acequias (irrigation channels and ditches) were used by Spanish settlers, their descendants, and Native Americans in New Mexico. Several such features were recently excavated in Santa Fe, but material for numeric dating was difficult to find. Therefore, for this high-energy-deposition irrigation-feature setting we applied optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) sediment dating methods to determine the timing of last filling of some of these acequias. We report multigrain single-aliquot quartz (MGSAQ) OSL dating results and the first single-grain quartz (SGQ) OSL dating results for irrigation features. One sample yielded an average age of 96 ± 13 yr, consistent with the maximum expected age of 127 yr (before 2007). An OSL age of 175 ± 15 yr for another sample delimits a sedimentation event since the first construction of that feature ca. 300 yr ago. A sample known to be younger than 400,450 yr but predating the mid-19th century gave an SGQ age of 376 ±31 yr. These results indicate that: (1) Regional quartz in New Mexico is highly favorable to OSL dating; (2) in this setting, SGQ OSL dating is preferred to MGSAQ dating; and (3) for the last 500,600 yr, SGQ OSL dating in such settings is preferred to 14C dating because OSL dating lacks those ambiguities inherent in converting 14C ages to calendar years. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


A reference model approach to performance monitoring of control loops with applications to irrigation channels

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADAPTIVE CONTROL AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, Issue 10 2005
P. Zhang
Abstract In this paper a new method for detection of oscillatory and sluggish controllers is developed. The method is aimed at control systems where rejection of measured load disturbances is the main control objective, and it is based on comparing the actual system output with the output of a reference model. A number of performance indicators are defined taking the most important factors from a control perspective into consideration. Based on the performance indicators, the performance of the control loops is evaluated. The developed method has been successfully applied to real data from an irrigation channel. The method correctly detected the control loops which needed retuning, and it provided useful information about several aspects of the control performance such as speed of response, oscillations and interactions between control loops. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Geostatistical characterization of the spatial distribution of Grapholita molesta and Anarsia lineatella males in an agricultural landscape

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2006
A. Sciarretta
Abstract:, The results obtained in spatial analysis of pheromone trap catches of oriental fruit moth, Grapholita molesta (Busck) and Peach twig borer, Anarsia lineatella (Zeller), are reported. The studies were performed in the Molise region, central Italy, during 2002 and 2003. Local distributions of oriental fruit moth and peach twig borer males were considered in a heterogeneous landscape. The aim of the study was to determine the temporal and spatial variation in distribution and abundance of the insect pests inside small plots of fruit orchards (apple, kiwi, peach, pear and plum fruits) and outside (in field crops, irrigation channels, hedgerows and a river), and to evaluate the importance of the host plants in relation to the adult distributions. Results showed that the main ,hot spot' for both lepidopterous pests was in a stone fruit orchard in the northern zone of the study area; other infested areas were in stone orchards and, in the case of A. lineatella, also in plum orchards. The river seems to act as a barrier rather than an ecological corridor. The observed spatio-temporal distributions of G. molesta and A. lineatella differed and were determined mainly by the location of the most important host plants and by the tendency of males to move in the environment, i.e. inside and outside the breeding and mating sites. Adequate knowledge of these spatial processes should be considered as an essential prerequisite for integrated pest management programmes in a precision farming approach. [source]