The APSIM Chickpea Module - (chickpea)
Introduction
The chickpea module was developed by Peter Carberry, Jill Turpin and Michael Robertson, with contributions of data from Bob Brinsmead and Harry Marcellos. The module is described in the paper by Robertson et al. (2002). This module is being updated by work conducted by Jeremy Whish at APSRU. The reader is referred to the science document for the plant module for a comprehensive description of the processes simulated by APSIM-Chickpea. This document outlines some chickpea-specific issues that are not covered by the plant science document.
Notable features of APSIM-CHICKPEA
Cultivars and crop classes
There is one crop class.
There are 6 cultivars able to be simulated: Amethyst, CPI56288, Dooen, Tyson, CV244-1, CPI56566. Cultivars differ in terms of biomass partitioning to grain and phenology. If users wish to use more modern cultivars they should contact Jeremy Whish at APSRU for advice.

Figure 1: Observed and simulated days to flowering for chickpea.

Figure 2: Performance of the chickpea module (observed versus simulated grain yield in g/m2) against test datasets reported by Robertson et al. (2002).
Validation
APSIM-Chickpea has received testing across the northern Australian wheat belt, with factors such as cultivars, sowing date, irrigation, soil type, row spacing varying. Some testing has occurred in Wa as well. Limited testing has been conducted under dryland conditions in Syria (Moeller 2004). Papers describing validation of APSIM-chickpea are by Carberry (1996) and Robertson et al. (2002). The accompanying figure 2 demonstrates the performance of the module against Australian datasets.
IN WHICH ENVIRONMENTS THIS MODULE SHOULD BE USED WITH CONFIDENCE?
APSIM-Chickpea can be used with most confidence in the semi-arid sub-tropics of northern Australia, the Western Australian wheat belt, and with less confidence in dryland environments of the Mediterranean.
References
Carberry PS 1996 Assessing the opportunity for increased production of grain legumes in the farming system. Final Report to the Grains Research and Development Corporation, Project CSC9, 33pp.
Moeller, C 2004. Simulation of chickpea and wheat growth in response to a semi-arid Mediterranean-type environment using APSIM' (Agricultural Production Systems Simulator. PhD Thesis Hohenheim University.
Robertson, M.J., Carberry, P.S., Huth, N.I., Turpin, J.E., Probert, M.E., Poulton, P.L., Bell, M., Wright, G.C., Yeates, S.J., and Brinsmead, R.B. 2002. Simulation of growth and development of diverse legume species in APSIM, Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 53:429-446.