Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (2024)

What is the effect on water conversation and plant quality?

In urban centers affected by drought and limited irrigation resources, the go-to recommendation for conserving water has traditionally been to water turf and garden landscapes at night. In recent years, however, population growth and development have led to supply demands at night that exceed the capacity of irrigation infrastructure. Given these challenges, urban water districts must balance maintaining conservation practices with customer demand.

Current assumptions are that nighttime irrigation is more efficient due to less evaporative demand (more humidity, lower temperature, no solar radiation, less wind. etc). However, watering in the afternoon could be more efficient because it coincides with peak photosynthesis and has microclimate cooling effects.

With these questions in mind, Assistant Professor, Melanie Stock, and graduate student, Samikshya Pyakurel, at Utah State University sought to quantify whether nighttime irrigation really conserves water—and how much—as well as measure the effects on plant aesthetics, yield, and health.

Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (1)Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (2)

To accomplish this, six identical plots of turfgrass and six plots of zinnia cut flowers (a popular and representative urban garden crop) were established, assigned irrigation timing treatments, and heavily instrumented to measure a water-energy balance. Apogee sensors used include Infrared Radiometers (SI-411-SS) to measure surface and canopy temperatures and Net Radiometers (SN-500-SS) to measure the four components of radiation and calculate albedo. The plots were also equipped with air temperature and humidity sensors, soil moisture and temperature sensors, irrigation flow meters, and catch cups, while the field is home to a weather station managed by the USU Climate Center. In all, 329 measurements are automated every 15 minutes at the site, while 162 measurements are collected by hand three times a week. This study makes use of the SDI-12 digital output, one of the most significant advances in sensor technology that allows for minimal datalogging equipment.

Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (3) Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (4)

Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (5) Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (6)

Application Summary

Summary

Apogee Instruments' Net Radiometers and Infrared Radiometers are used to test urban crop irrigation in Utah.

Apogee Sensors Used

Organization

USU Department of Plants, Soils, and Climate

Location

Logan, Utah

"I think Apogee sensors are especially great for their SDI-12 digital output capabilities and price points. Gone are the days of an entire datalogger being used on a single net radiometer. Now we can not only fit many sensors on one datalogger, but we can also get away with using the much less expensive dataloggers—it is incredible! On top of this, the specs and price point of net radiometers from Apogee are truly a game-changer."

Dr. Melanie Stock
Assistant Professor
Urban & Small Farms Extensions Specialist

Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting (2024)

FAQs

Day vs. Night Watering in Urban Irrigation Setting? ›

Nighttime temperatures and wind speeds are much lower, which means lower evaporative losses during irrigation. Nighttime humidity is higher, which also reduces evaporation. No sun exists, so solar radiation does not contribute to water evaporation.

Is it better to irrigate morning or night? ›

Morning watering is actually preferable to evening watering as the plant has time to dry before the sun goes down. At night, water tends to rest in the soil, around the roots, and on the foliage, which encourages rot, fungal growth, and insects.

What are the disadvantages of night irrigation? ›

Here's the problem, though: while too much evaporation is bad, no evaporation is also worse. Many fungal and bacterial diseases that can harm your lawn and your plants thrive in wet foliage. With no hot sun to burn it off, excess water sits there all night long.

Is it better to run sprinklers at night or in the morning? ›

Watering your lawn early in the morning is tremendously better than watering it at night, for completely opposite reasons. While watering during the day causes water to evaporate too quickly, watering in the evening allows water to cling to the grass for too long.

What is the best time of the day for irrigation? ›

Answer: Early morning (5:00 to 9:00 am) is the best time to water the garden when using a sprinkler, garden hose, or any other device that wets the plant foliage. When watering is completed, the plant foliage dries quickly. The rapid drying of plant foliage helps guard against the development of fungal diseases.

Why not irrigate at night? ›

Watering at night is not the best for your plants' leaves or overall health. Here's why. After a night time soak, leaves can stay wet for a pretty long time since they don't have the sun to dry them off. Because of this, damp leaves become extra vulnerable to fungal development.

What is the best schedule for irrigation system? ›

The best time to water is in the early morning hours. Allow 30 to 60 minutes between watering cycles so water has a chance to soak in the soil. The heavier the soil, the longer the soak time needed. As water needs increase, don't add time to the cycles, or you will get runoff.

Why don t farmers irrigate at night? ›

Dave Nicolai, a University of Minnesota Extension educator based in Farmington, said there can be pitfalls to night watering. Certain crops are more susceptible to bacteria or fungus if they stay wet for too long.

What are 3 harmful effects of excessive irrigation? ›

Over-irrigation leads to water loss, increases energy use for pumping, causes leaching of nitrogen and other micro nutrients, and wastes time. Crop nitrogen needs, fertilizer costs, and nitrogen losses to groundwater also result from over-irrigation.

What are 3 disadvantages of irrigation? ›

The major drawbacks of traditional irrigation systems are as follows:
  • Uneven distribution of water. Some crops get more water while some crops get less water.
  • Waterlogging is another issue in uneven land.
  • It requires the use of cattle and human labour, thus it is less efficient.

What is the ideal irrigation time? ›

The best time of day to begin irrigation is after nightfall. The irrigation cycle should end early enough before sunrise to allow excess water to soak into the landscape so that the leaves will dry normally. Nighttime temperatures and wind speeds are much lower, which means lower evaporative losses during irrigation.

What time should I start my irrigation system? ›

The ideal time to water, therefore, is early in the morning between 4 am and 8 am. Your lawn will have time to absorb the moisture deep down to promote root growth, but will not be too damp by dark that it encourages fungus and other problems. The number of hours of continuous wetness should be kept to a minimum.

When should you irrigate water? ›

For sprinkler systems, irrigation should be started when the moisture reaches 50% of field capacity. Soil water tension is determined by how tightly water is held within the soil. Drier soils hold water more tightly. As the soil dries, the tension increases and as the soil is wetted the tension decreases.

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