Folks, I have asked one of our 2017 summer
interns, Trey Buxton, to address a topic with a few practical answers about
LEPA irrigations.
LEPA, a brief background and best
management practices.
It was the late
1970’s is when the idea behind LEPA irrigation systems for pivots first entered
practical research trials for its potential to maximize irrigation inputs by
saving energy, increasing irrigation efficiency from pump to root zone, and
water use efficiency by the crop. It was
developed for areas like here in West Texas that had center pivot irrigation
that had limited access to water and high and increasing energy costs. Dr. Bill
Lyle and James Bordovsky should receive the most credit for the developing LEPA
at the Lubbock-Halfway Texas Agricultural Experiment Station.
Some people might
wonder why a producer would want to water their crop on LEPA stage or even what
the difference is. “LEPA” stands for Low Efficient Pressure Application. LEPA has been tested and proven that 95% to
98% of the irrigation water pumped (at ever increasing costs) gets to the
crop’s root zone. Granted, that is under
ideal situations with all equipment working at peak efficiency but even with
some give on those numbers it is so much better than the 35% efficiency with
gated pipe and the 45% to 60% expected for the higher pressure pivots of the day that
sprayed water through the air and across the soil surface. In its earliest design, LEPA applied water by
hoses that drag along the ground and release water without waist through air
exposure and evaporation while making use of a much lower operating
pressure. The hose concept has been
revisited and improved upon with various designs over the years with some
impressive savings, but when most of us consider a LEPA outfitted pivot we
envision the nozzles with changeable settings, with the bubble mode set,
resting at the end of a long hose dangling from the pivot about 4 to 18 inches
above the surface. The hoses are usually separated about every 60 to 80 inches
depending on row spacing so that rows are skip row irrigated. So, with LEPA type pivot irrigations plants
do not get water applied to the plant and soil from above under high pressure with
plenty of evaporation opportunities, the water is applied as close to the soil
surface as possible, preferably into the bottom of a furrow, which then soaks
into the soil and directly to the roots with minimal waste. It is said that LEPA works best on farms that
have sandy or loamy soil because the chances of runoff is not as likely to
happen like it would if you had soil that is heavier or tighter. The chances of runoff also increase in
no-till systems and on steep slopes.
From this original LEPA idea, several pivot and nozzle / hose types have
been developed along the same principle.
Most of these more efficient pivots have adjustable nozzles with at
least a spray mode and a bubble mode.
With these types
of water savings, it can be difficult to understand why we would ever even use
a spray mode and go somewhat back to a less efficient method of
irrigation. The truth is, LEPA is great
for in-season irrigation efficiency, but terrible for wetting the seed zone and
establishing a fledgling crop. Those
young plant roots cannot find the moisture from LEPA irrigations and the seeds
certainly cannot. So, a very common
question from producers is, “When should I change from spray to bubble mode to
best maximize my irrigation efficiency without hurting my young plants and
stand establishment?”
There really isn’t
a set stage for when you should switch over to LEPA. The proper time to switch
over to LEPA is the when the plants are grown enough to find the deeper held
and better applied water. Some people will
make the mistake of switching to LEPA before the crop is mature enough and the
young plants will drought stress and perhaps even die before ever finding that
deep moisture so far away from the seed zone.
You have to let the plants grow and develop strong roots in the ground
so when you switch over to LEPA the roots will be able to reach the water. Sometimes we need to help them get to the
point that they can find that water on their own with spray irrigations and we
are very likely to need even irrigations to germinate our often dry planted seeds. More producers likely make the mistake of
staying in spray mode too long and waist some of their precious water by not
being as efficient as they could be.
Although that is the safer play and there isn’t exactly a set stage for
when you should change over to LEPA, if you had to choose a stage to switch
over it’d somewhere between match head square and ¼ grown square stage. This is about the stage that cotton plants
start seriously building lots of fruit sites and vegetative structure. With a similar process going on below ground
with the root system, this is generally the first time cotton plants can ‘look’
for soil moisture themselves.
References
Leon New and Guy Fipps, Center
Pivot Irrigation, Texas Agricultural Extension Service
Porter, D., Irrigation For Small
Farms
Amosson, S. , Lal Almas, L.,
Girase, J., Kenny, N., Guerrero, B., Vimlesh,K., Thomas Marek, T., B-6113, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
Publication, Economics of Irrigation SystemsLyle, William M., 1982, Water
Saving Techniques, Journal of Agronomic Science (pp 72-82).
Reed, B. Conversation about LEPA
systems, 2017, Internship with Plains Pest Management Association
Thanks Trey!
Blayne