Groundwater irrigation induced soil sodification and response options

Minhas, Paramijit S., Qadir, Manzoor and Yadav, Rajender Kumar, (2019). Groundwater irrigation induced soil sodification and response options. Agricultural Water Management, 215 74-85

Document type:
Article

Metadata
Links
Versions
Statistics
  • Sub-type Journal article
    Author Minhas, Paramijit S.
    Qadir, Manzoor
    Yadav, Rajender Kumar
    Title Groundwater irrigation induced soil sodification and response options
    Appearing in Agricultural Water Management
    Volume 215
    Publication Date 2019-01-28
    Place of Publication Amsterdam
    Publisher Elsevier B.V.
    Start page 74
    End page 85
    Language eng
    Abstract The continuous surge in irrigation, particularly using groundwater for sustaining food security in many developing countries, has necessitated the utilization of low-quality waters especially in water-scarce arid and semi-arid regions. Inappropriate irrigation with these waters results in land and environment degradation produced by associated salts, sodium and other toxic elements. Generally the soil’s sodification process is insidious and build-up of exchangeable-Na is initially gradual. It stabilises at levels governed by sodicity indices of irrigation water, soil type, cropping sequences and agro-climatic conditions. As the soils become sodic, crop productivity declines and ultimately soils can become unsuitable for cropping. As a result, cultivators are forced to opt for tolerant crops, which are typically of less economic value. To minimize harmful effects of sodicity, remedial measures have been developed at the crop, root zone, farm and district/basin levels. These include water quality driven conjunctive uses, chemical amelioration of soils and irrigation waters, mobilising native calcite through phyto-remediation, growing tolerant crops, and other specialised tillage, fertiliser use and irrigation practices. This review seeks to critically analyse the role of these measures and the crop, water and soil factors defining the sodification vis-à-vis infiltration problems. The conclusions provided here are expected to be helpful for a range of stakeholders to promote irrigation with sodic/alkali waters, thereby partly alleviating the forecasted scarcities in water for agriculture.
    Copyright Holder Elsevier B. V.
    Copyright Year 2019
    Copyright type All rights reserved
    DOI 10.1016/j.agwat.2018.12.030
  • Versions
    Version Filter Type
  • Citation counts
    Google Scholar Search Google Scholar
    Access Statistics: 416 Abstract Views  -  Detailed Statistics
    Created: Sat, 29 Jan 2022, 14:30:51 JST by Anderson, Kelsey on behalf of UNU INWEH