한국농림기상학회:학술대회논문집 (Proceedings of The Korean Society of Agricultural and Forest Meteorology Conference)
- 한국농림기상학회 2011년도 학술발표회
- /
- Pages.7-10
- /
- 2011
Climate Change and Soil-Water Balance
- Aydin, Mehmet (Department of Biological Environment, Kangwon National University) ;
- Yano, Tomohisa (Arid Land Research Center, Tottori University) ;
- Haraguchi, Tomokazu (Faculty of Agriculture, Saga University) ;
- Evrendilek, Fatih (Faculty of Engineering and Architecture, Izzet Baysal University) ;
- Jung, Yeong-Sang (Department of Biological Environment, Kangwon National University)
- 발행 : 2011.11.04
초록
The semi-arid and arid regions comprise almost 40 percent of the world's land surface. The low and erratic precipitation pattern is the single most significant contributor for limiting crop production in such regions where rainfall is the source for surface, soil and ground water. In a changing climate, the semi-arid and arid regions would increasingly face the challenge of water scarcity. According to the relevant literature; under the assumption of a doubling of the current atmospheric CO2 concentration, irrigation demand was estimated to increase for wheat and to decrease for second crop maize in a Mediterranean environment of Turkey in the 2070s. Crop evapotranspiration would decrease due to stomata closure. Reference evapotranspiration and potential soil evaporation were projected to increase by 8.0 and 7.3%, respectively, whereas actual soil evaporation was predicted to decrease by 16.5%. Drainage losses below 90 cm soil depth were found to decrease mainly due to lesser rainfall amount in the future.