5.5: Irrigation Methods Flashcards

1
Q

Largest human use of freshwater

A

Irrigation (70%)

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2
Q

Types of Irrigation

A

Furrow, flood, drip, spray

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3
Q

Definition, efficiency, pros and cons

Furrow Irrigation

A
  • Trench is dug along crops and filled with water
  • It’s 66% efficient meaning 33% is lost to evaporation and runoff
  • It’s easy and inexpensive, high sediment water can be used and it allows for some precision
  • It is not efficient on sandy soil, it can cause soil erosion
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4
Q

Flood irrigation

A
  • Water is diverted from surface water or pumped from groundwater and used to flood fields
  • It is 80% efficient
  • It’s easy and inexpensive, there’s no mechanization required
  • This method is not for all plant types and runs the risk of waterlogging and salinization
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5
Q

Drip Irrigation

A
  • Holes in a hose or pipe allow water to sloly drip out
  • 95% efficient
  • Avoids waterlogging, reduces nutrient leaching, and it conserves water
  • Most costly, hose/pipe clogs easily, requires mechanization
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6
Q

Spray Irrigation

A
  • Ground and surface water is pumped through spray nozzles
  • It’s more efficient than flood and furrow irrigation with <25% lost
  • It allows for precise application, you can add supplements and nutrients to the water and you can program it to go off at certain times
  • More expensive, more mechanization, nozzles can clog
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7
Q

What is waterlogging?

A

When too much water is left to sit in soil leaving the plant roots unable to get the oxygen they need for cellular respiration leading to the roots dying followed by the plants dying

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8
Q

How can you fix waterlogging?

A
  • Left the field dry out
  • Add more sand to the soil
  • Soil aeration
  • Drip Irrigation
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9
Q

What is salinization

A
  • When ground and freshwater evaporates, the salt contained is left behind in the soil and overtime becomes toxic to the plants and inhibits their growth
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10
Q

How to fix salinization?

A

Flush with water, drip irrigation, switch to freshwater, soil aeration

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11
Q

Global Human water use?

A
  • Industrial: power plants, metal manufacturing
  • Municipal: toilet, shower, drinking water
  • Ag: irrigation and water for livestock
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12
Q

Groundwater

A

Water stored in the pore space of permeable rock and sediment layers

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13
Q

Aquifers

A

Useable groundwater deposits. They can be unconfined and recharge quickly or confined and recharge slower by long-term deposits

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14
Q

Saltwater intrusion

A

Excess pumping near coast lowers water table pressure allowing saltwater to seep into groundwater

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15
Q

Cone of depression

A

When water table is lowered by excessive pumping, depleting water and drying nearby wells

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