Despite its significant water-saving potential, the adoption of alternate wetting and drying (AWD) irrigation remains limited due to infrastructure constraints and intensive manual monitoring requirements. An automated precision irrigation system was developed and tested at the Bangladesh Rice Research Institute research farm in Gazipur, Bangladesh. The system combined ultrasonic water-level sensors, capacitive soil moisture sensors, an Arduino-based microcontroller, a GSM communication module, and solar-powered automatic control gates. Field performance was evaluated following a Randomized Complete Block Design (RCBD) under four irrigation treatments: IRRISAT, IRRI35, IRRI25, and continuous flooding (CF). The first three irrigation treatments were operated using scheduled daily decision windows, in which irrigation actions were automatically triggered based on predefined schedules and sensor threshold values. In IRRISAT, irrigation started when soil moisture dropped slightly below saturation and stopped at a ponding depth of 5 cm, while IRRI35 and IRRI25 were triggered at volumetric soil water contents of 35% and 25%, respectively, with the same upper cutoff of 5 cm ponding depth; CF served as the control. The IRRI35 treatment achieved a high grain yield (7.76 t ha−1) while reducing water use by 28% and energy consumption by 37% compared to CF. Water use efficiency was considerably higher under IRRI35 (9.4 kg ha−1 mm−1) than under CF (6.7 kg ha−1 mm−1). The automated system proved to be reliable and precise in scheduled irrigation control, significantly reducing water use and labor requirements. The findings suggest that large-scale adoption of the system under real-world cultivation conditions could reduce irrigation energy needs and contribute to sustainable water governance in rice production.
Mahmud et al. (Sun,) studied this question.