Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation

Microirrigation is the slow, frequent application of water directly to relatively small areas adjacent to individual plants through emitters placed along a water delivery line. A leading advantage of microirrigation is that evaporation that does not contribute to plant growth happens much less than...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lincoln Zotarelli, Clyde Fraisse, Daniel Dourte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries 2012-07-01
Series:EDIS
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/119977
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823867840461012992
author Lincoln Zotarelli
Clyde Fraisse
Daniel Dourte
author_facet Lincoln Zotarelli
Clyde Fraisse
Daniel Dourte
author_sort Lincoln Zotarelli
collection DOAJ
description Microirrigation is the slow, frequent application of water directly to relatively small areas adjacent to individual plants through emitters placed along a water delivery line. A leading advantage of microirrigation is that evaporation that does not contribute to plant growth happens much less than with sprinkler irrigation. This 5-page fact sheet was written by Lincoln Zotarelli, Clyde Fraisse, and Daniel Dourte, and published by the UF Department of Horticultural Sciences, July 2012. HS1203/HS1203: Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation (ufl.edu)
format Article
id doaj-art-b6ac0040d2424a04ac0561e353be7803
institution Kabale University
issn 2576-0009
language English
publishDate 2012-07-01
publisher The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries
record_format Article
series EDIS
spelling doaj-art-b6ac0040d2424a04ac0561e353be78032025-02-08T06:06:03ZengThe University of Florida George A. Smathers LibrariesEDIS2576-00092012-07-0120127Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: MicroirrigationLincoln Zotarelli0Clyde Fraisse1Daniel DourteUniversity of FloridaUniversity of FloridaMicroirrigation is the slow, frequent application of water directly to relatively small areas adjacent to individual plants through emitters placed along a water delivery line. A leading advantage of microirrigation is that evaporation that does not contribute to plant growth happens much less than with sprinkler irrigation. This 5-page fact sheet was written by Lincoln Zotarelli, Clyde Fraisse, and Daniel Dourte, and published by the UF Department of Horticultural Sciences, July 2012. HS1203/HS1203: Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation (ufl.edu) https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/119977HS1203
spellingShingle Lincoln Zotarelli
Clyde Fraisse
Daniel Dourte
Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation
EDIS
HS1203
title Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation
title_full Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation
title_fullStr Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation
title_short Agricultural Management Options for Climate Variability and Change: Microirrigation
title_sort agricultural management options for climate variability and change microirrigation
topic HS1203
url https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/119977
work_keys_str_mv AT lincolnzotarelli agriculturalmanagementoptionsforclimatevariabilityandchangemicroirrigation
AT clydefraisse agriculturalmanagementoptionsforclimatevariabilityandchangemicroirrigation
AT danieldourte agriculturalmanagementoptionsforclimatevariabilityandchangemicroirrigation