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Irrigation Measurements and Cost Topic #2073 Megan Burgess
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Overview Amount of water for irrigation Water measurements Irrigation costs Water penetration Water quality Water holding capacity Nitrates Selenium
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Amount of Water for Irrigation Amount varies with soil, climate, crop, and time to maturity Replace water lost by transpiration and evaporation Irrigation principles are simple Needs of crops vary
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Water Measurements Rainfall reports Water precipitated: Inches per area such as “acre inch of water” Totaled annually If it rained 12 inches of rain in the rainy season, then we had enough water to cover each acre with 1 foot of water
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Irrigation Costs Landowner is charged for each acre foot of water If Grower A uses 1.75 acres feet of water, and the cost is $50 per acre feet, what is the total cost? 1.75 x $50 = $87.50
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Irrigation Costs If a crop requires 32 inches of water to reach maturity, and it rained 12 inches, how much water is added by irrigation? 32 inches - 12 inches = 20 inches water needs to be added if 100% efficient Best efficiency = 85-90%, commonly 65- 75% efficiency Water would be 22-30 inches
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Water Penetration Soil should not reach permanent wilting percent before adding more water With each irrigation depth of water penetration is a little less Dry soils don’t wet as easy as moist Water moves through soil at Field Capacity
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Water Penetration Cannot partially wet a soil Small irrigation goes down a short distance Depth of water penetration can be determined by Tension meters Soil auger Soil-sampling tube
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Water Penetration Typical ranges: Sand - 10 to 12 inches Silt - 6 to 10 inches Clay - 4 to 6 inches
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Water Quantity Quantity varies by Soil moisture content Depth Water holding capacity Depth of penetration will vary with soil Some soils hold less than 1 inch of water per foot of soil (others 2 inches)
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Water Quantity Cost of irrigation water will vary with district, fuel to pump, and depth of water being pumped. Water cost may determine crop profitability Sometimes only high-valued crops can be grown profitably with high water costs
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Water Holding Capacity Ability of soil to hold water Typical capacities: Sandy -.5 to.75 inches/foot Loam -.75 to 1.25 inches/foot Clay - 1.25 to 2.0 inches/foot
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Nitrates Nitrogen fertilizers are soluble and move readily in water Water carries nitrates deep in soil If in large quantities of drinking water they are harmful to human health
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Nitrates Factors that influence amount of nitrate movement to groundwater: Amount of nitrate dissolved in soil Rate used by plants Water available for runoff and leaching Soil permeability
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Selenium Sometimes found in areas of agriculture drainage Nonessential mineral absorbed by plants, too much is toxic Trace amounts are essential to animal life Causes “alkali disease” in livestock Wheat is grown in high selenium areas Too much will retard plant growth
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