skip to main contentskip to footer

Quick links

  • Athletics
  • Make a gift
  • Student portal
  • Job openings
  • Employee directory
  • Apply
  • Costs
  • Explore
Explore U of I
  • Visit and virtual tour
  • Student life
  • Find your degree
  • Get around campus
  • Meet Moscow
  • Join our email list
  • Events
  • Athletics
Academics
  • Academic calendar
  • Find a major
  • Academic support
  • Undergrad research opportunities
  • Meet the colleges
  • Online learning
  • Explore in-demand careers
Admissions
  • Meet your counselor
  • Deadlines
  • First-year students
  • Graduate students
  • Law students
  • Online students
  • Transfer students
  • International students
  • Admitted students
Financial aid
  • Cost of attendance
  • Steps for financial aid
  • FAFSA information
  • Financial aid FAQs
  • In-state scholarships
  • Out-of-state and international scholarships
  • Connect with financial aid
More
  • Student life
  • Research
  • Recreational offerings
  • Student resources
  • Alumni
  • Parents
  • Newsroom
  • Events
  • Sustainability initiatives
Find your passion - Explore majors Become a Vandal - Start an application
  • Student portal
  • Make a gift
  • Athletics
  • Directory
Events
Congratulate graduates
Celebrate 2026 graduates at ceremonies in Moscow, Boise and Idaho Falls.
Experience Summer Design Days
High school students, explore creativity and design during Summer Design Days, June 24-27.
Join Vandal alumni at Silverwood
Enjoy the fun-filled Vandal Day at Silverwood July 30. Tickets include early access and dinner.
Events
News
A black and white map of Idaho with an overlay of colors depicting magnetic values of rocks.
New geophysical dataset maps Idaho’s subsurface
A bighorn ram.
Genetic diversity of Idaho bighorn sheep decline
News
Support a Vandal - Make a gift
  • Apply
  • Costs
  • Explore
  • Explore
  • Academics
  • Admissions
  • Financial Aid
  • Student life
  • Research
  • Recreational offerings
  • Student resources
  • Alumni
  • Parents
  • Newsroom
  • Events
  • Sustainability initiatives
  1. Home/
  2. U of I Newsroom/
  3. snake flux

New tech improves water loss estimates for irrigators

New sensor network provides real-time data on crop water loss, helping Idaho farmers and water managers improve irrigation efficiency

Assistant Professor Meetpal Kukal does water research at McKellip Sod Farm in Nampa, ID Tuesday, April 29, 2025.

BY John O’Connell

Photos by Melissa Hartley

September 29, 2025

A University of Idaho researcher has established a network of field-based monitoring stations throughout southern Idaho, generating data to develop and improve models assessing the volume of water lost from croplands through evapotranspiration.

Idaho water managers administer water rights based on diversions — the volume of surface water that irrigators divert or groundwater that they pump from wells. Diversions include water consumed through evaporation from soils and transpiration from plants — together evapotranspiration (ET); diversions also include the unconsumed water that returns to streams or aquifers and becomes available to other downstream irrigators.

Meetpal Kukal, an assistant professor of hydrologic science and water management, believes a more comprehensive, fair and effective method of water accounting would be to also track the consumptive use of water emitted from foliage and soil as vapor through ET.

Kukal and support scientist Clarence Robison established the SnakeFlux network, which includes clusters of sensors at ten locations spanning the Snake River Plain from Declo to Wilder, stationed within desert sagebrush and irrigated potato, sugarbeet, spring wheat, barley and turfgrass fields.

Two of these locations are within the university-led Idaho Center for Agriculture, Food and the Environment (Idaho CAFE), located in Rupert. The network also includes data from three monitoring stations that are part of an ongoing collaborative project with the Idaho Department of Water Resources (IDWR) and U of I researchers Erin Brooks, Jason Kelley and Kukal. Those three stations are funded through the Idaho Water Resources Board.

Meetpal Kukal studies wiring inside of a white box at one of his SnakeFlux weather stations, based in a Nampa sod field.
Meetpal Kukal checks connections at a SnakeFlux site in a commercial sod field in Nampa. The SnakeFlux network is used to monitor evapotranspiration, hydrologic fluxes and storage.

The stations use high-frequency sensors that measure eddies — swirls of air that carry heat, water and gases away from the ground. Data will be delivered every half hour throughout the growing season, enabling Kukal to estimate water use based on a formula involving the total energy partitioned to evaporate water and heat the soil and air. His team also measures critical soil, crop and management data from these locations to better infer what drives ET rates. He plans to make critical water data available to Idahoans and will continue to look for agricultural sites to monitor in other locations within the Snake River Plain in consequent growing seasons.

“ET is an invisible process, which means it’s really hard to measure,” Kukal said. “With this network, we’re trying to make gold-standard measurements for this process.”

Kukal envisions several applications for SnakeFlux data, such as, helping farmers improve their irrigation scheduling, helping the state address gaps in water accounting and updating crop coefficients. A crop coefficient is a parameter used to predict ET based on the amount of water a crop needs for specific growth stages and weather conditions. Crop coefficients of many popular Idaho crop varieties were last measured in the 1970s.

ET is an invisible process, which means it’s really hard to measure. With this network, we’re trying to make gold-standard measurements for this process.

Meetpal Kukal

Assistant professor of hydrologic science and water management

Having ground-measured ET data will also help government officials gauge and improve the performance of products that generate real-time ET estimates based on satellite imagery. IDWR, for example, is considering using one such product, called OpenET, for keeping tabs on the state’s water consumption.

“Evaluating those products has recently been a really big priority for all of the western states,” Kukal said.

Kukal is making field-specific SnakeFlux data available on a website to commercial growers who have allowed him to locate sensors in their fields. He’s also been in communication with commodity commissions, industry and water managers to demonstrate applications for SnakeFlux, based on the potential to help farmers make crop-specific adjustments to improve their water management. Kukal is seeking financial and broader stakeholder support for U of I’s ET monitoring efforts.

Related Topics

Technology and CybersecurityResource ManagementWaterCrops and PlantsSoilsExtension and Research Centers

Related stories

Explore all stories

Footer

Ready to apply?

Start your application
Joe_Vandal_rgb_2026.svg

Footer Navigation

Resources

  • Jobs
  • Privacy statement
  • Web accessibility
  • Title IX

Campus

  • Directory
  • Map
  • Safety
  • Events

Information For

  • Prospective students
  • Current students
  • Parents
  • Employees
Logo

University of Idaho

875 Perimeter Drive, Moscow, ID 83844

208-885-6111

info@uidaho.edu

Engage with U of I on Facebook. Get the latest U of I updates on X. Catch up with U of I on Instagram. Grow your professional network by connecting with U of I on LinkedIn. Interact with University of Idaho's video content on YouTube.
Support a Vandal - Make a gift
  • Athletics
  • News
  • Policies

© 2026 University of Idaho