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Wikipedia

Irrigation

Irrigation (also referred to as watering) is the practice of applying controlled amounts of water to land to help grow crops, landscape plants, and lawns. Irrigation has been a key aspect of agriculture for over 5,000 years and has been developed by many cultures around the world. Irrigation helps to grow crops, maintain landscapes, and revegetate disturbed soils in dry areas and during times of below-average rainfall. In addition to these uses, irrigation is also employed to protect crops from frost,[1] suppress weed growth in grain fields, and prevent soil consolidation. It is also used to cool livestock, reduce dust, dispose of sewage, and support mining operations. Drainage, which involves the removal of surface and sub-surface water from a given location, is often studied in conjunction with irrigation.

Irrigation of agricultural fields in Andalusia, Spain. Irrigation canal on the left.

There are several methods of irrigation that differ in how water is supplied to plants. Surface irrigation, also known as gravity irrigation, is the oldest form of irrigation and has been in use for thousands of years. In sprinkler irrigation, water is piped to one or more central locations within the field and distributed by overhead high-pressure water devices. Micro-irrigation is a system that distributes water under low pressure through a piped network and applies it as a small discharge to each plant. Micro-irrigation uses less pressure and water flow than sprinkler irrigation. Drip irrigation delivers water directly to the root zone of plants. Subirrigation has been used in field crops in areas with high water tables for many years. It involves artificially raising the water table to moisten the soil below the root zone of plants.

Irrigation water can come from groundwater (extracted from springs or by using wells), from surface water (withdrawn from rivers, lakes or reservoirs) or from non-conventional sources like treated wastewater, desalinated water, drainage water, or fog collection. Irrigation can be supplementary to rainfall, which is common in many parts of the world as rainfed agriculture, or it can be full irrigation, where crops rarely rely on any contribution from rainfall. Full irrigation is less common and only occurs in arid landscapes with very low rainfall or when crops are grown in semi-arid areas outside of rainy seasons.

The environmental effects of irrigation relate to the changes in quantity and quality of soil and water as a result of irrigation and the subsequent effects on natural and social conditions in river basins and downstream of an irrigation scheme. The effects stem from the altered hydrological conditions caused by the installation and operation of the irrigation scheme. Amongst some of these problems is depletion of underground aquifers through overdrafting. Soil can be over-irrigated due to poor distribution uniformity or management wastes water, chemicals, and may lead to water pollution. Over-irrigation can cause deep drainage from rising water tables that can lead to problems of irrigation salinity requiring watertable control by some form of subsurface land drainage.

Extent

 
Share of agricultural land which is irrigated (2015)

In year 2000, the total fertile land was 2,788,000 km2 (689 million acres) and it was equipped with irrigation infrastructure worldwide. About 68% of this area is in Asia, 17% in the Americas, 9% in Europe, 5% in Africa and 1% in Oceania. The largest contiguous areas of high irrigation density are found in Northern and Eastern India and Pakistan along the Ganges and Indus rivers; in the Hai He, Huang He and Yangtze basins in China; along the Nile river in Egypt and Sudan; and in the Mississippi-Missouri river basin, the Southern Great Plains, and in parts of California in the United States. Smaller irrigation areas are spread across almost all populated parts of the world.[2]

By 2012, the area of irrigated land had increased to an estimated total of 3,242,917 km2 (801 million acres), which is nearly the size of India.[3] The irrigation of 20% of farming land accounts for the production of 40% of food production.[4][5]

Global overview

The scale of irrigation increased dramatically over the 20th century. In 1800, 8 million hectares globally were irrigated, in 1950, 94 million hectares, and in 1990, 235 million hectares. By 1990, 30% of the global food production came from irrigated land.[6] Irrigation techniques across the globe includes canals redirecting surface water,[7][8] groundwater pumping, and diverting water from dams. National governments lead most irrigation schemes within their borders, but private investors[9] and other nations,[8] especially the United States,[10] China,[11] and European countries like the United Kingdom,[12] also fund and organize some schemes within other nations.

Irrigation enables the production of more crops, especially commodity crops in areas which otherwise could not support them. Countries frequently invested in irrigation to increase wheat, rice, or cotton production, often with the overarching goal of increasing self-sufficiency.[12]

Water sources

 
Irrigation is underway by pump-enabled extraction directly from the Gumti, seen in the background, in Comilla, Bangladesh.

Groundwater and surface water

 
Grapes in Petrolina, Brazil only made possible in this semi arid area by drip irrigation

Irrigation water can come from groundwater (extracted from springs or by using wells), from surface water (withdrawn from rivers, lakes or reservoirs) or from non-conventional sources like treated wastewater, desalinated water, drainage water, or fog collection.

While floodwater harvesting belongs to the accepted irrigation methods, rainwater harvesting is usually not considered as a form of irrigation. Rainwater harvesting is the collection of runoff water from roofs or unused land and the concentration of this.

Treated or untreated wastewater

Irrigation with recycled municipal wastewater can also serve to fertilize plants if it contains nutrients, such as nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. There are benefits of using recycled water for irrigation, including the lower cost compared to some other sources and consistency of supply regardless of season, climatic conditions and associated water restrictions. When reclaimed water is used for irrigation in agriculture, the nutrient (nitrogen and phosphorus) content of the treated wastewater has the benefit of acting as a fertilizer.[13] This can make the reuse of excreta contained in sewage attractive.[14]

The irrigation water can be used in different ways on different crops: For food crops to be eaten raw: crops which are intended for human consumption to be eaten raw or unprocessed. For processed food crops: crops which are intended for human consumption not to be eaten raw but after treatment process (i.e. cooked, industrially processed).[15] It can also be used on non-food crops: crops which are not intended for human consumption (e.g. pastures, forage, fiber, ornamental, seed, forest and turf crops).[16]

In developing countries, agriculture is increasingly using untreated municipal wastewater for irrigation – often in an unsafe manner. Cities provide lucrative markets for fresh produce, so are attractive to farmers. However, because agriculture has to compete for increasingly scarce water resources with industry and municipal users, there is often no alternative for farmers but to use water polluted with urban waste directly to water their crops.

There can be significant health hazards related to using untreated wastewater in agriculture. Municipal wastewater can contain a mixture of chemical and biological pollutants. In low-income countries, there are often high levels of pathogens from excreta. In emerging nations, where industrial development is outpacing environmental regulation, there are increasing risks from inorganic and organic chemicals. The World Health Organization has developed guidelines for safe use of wastewater in 2006.[14] These guidelines advocate a ‘multiple-barrier' approach wastewater use, for example by encouraging farmers to adopt various risk-reducing behaviors. These include ceasing irrigation a few days before harvesting to allow pathogens to die off in the sunlight, applying water carefully so it does not contaminate leaves likely to be eaten raw, cleaning vegetables with disinfectant or allowing fecal sludge used in farming to dry before being used as a human manure.[13]

Drawbacks or risks often mentioned include the content of potentially harmful substances such as bacteria, heavy metals or organic pollutants (including pharmaceuticals, personal care products and pesticides). Irrigation with wastewater can have both positive and negative effects on soil and plants, depending on the composition of the wastewater and on the soil or plant characteristics.[17]

Other sources

Irrigation water can also come from non-conventional sources like treated wastewater, desalinated water, drainage water, or fog collection.

In countries where humid air sweeps through at night, water can be obtained by condensation onto cold surfaces. This is practiced in the vineyards at Lanzarote using stones to condense water. Fog collectors are also made of canvas or foil sheets. Using condensate from air conditioning units as a water source is also becoming more popular in large urban areas.

As of November 2019 a Glasgow-based startup has helped a farmer in Scotland to establish edible saltmarsh crops irrigated with sea water. An acre of previously marginal land has been put under cultivation to grow samphire, sea blite, and sea aster; these plants yield a higher profit than potatoes. The land is flood irrigated twice a day to simulate tidal flooding; the water is pumped from the sea using wind power. Additional benefits are soil remediation and carbon sequestration.[18][19]

Competition for water resources

Until 1960s, there were fewer than half the current number of people on the planet. People were not as wealthy as today, consumed fewer calories and ate less meat, so less water was needed to produce their food. They required a third of the volume of water we presently take from rivers. Today, the competition for water resources is much more intense. This is because there are now more than seven billion people on the planet, increasing the likelihood of overconsumption of food produced by water-thirsty animal agriculture and intensive farming practices, and there is increasing competition for water from industry, urbanisation and biofuel crops. Farmers will have to strive to increase productivity to meet growing demands for food, while industry and cities find ways to use water more efficiently.[20]

Successful agriculture is dependent upon farmers having sufficient access to water. However, water scarcity is already a critical constraint to farming in many parts of the world.

Irrigation methods

There are several methods of irrigation. They vary in how the water is supplied to the plants. The goal is to apply the water to the plants as uniformly as possible, so that each plant has the amount of water it needs, neither too much nor too little. Irrigation can also be understood whether it is supplementary to rainfall as happens in many parts of the world, or whether it is 'full irrigation' whereby crops rarely depend on any contribution from rainfall. Full irrigation is less common and only happens in arid landscapes experiencing very low rainfall or when crops are grown in semi-arid areas outside of any rainy seasons.

Surface irrigation

Surface irrigation, also known as gravity irrigation, is the oldest form of irrigation and has been in use for thousands of years. In surface (furrow, flood, or level basin) irrigation systems, water moves across the surface of agricultural lands, in order to wet it and infiltrate into the soil. Water moves by following gravity or the slope of the land. Surface irrigation can be subdivided into furrow, border strip or basin irrigation. It is often called flood irrigation when the irrigation results in flooding or near flooding of the cultivated land. Historically, surface irrigation is the most common method of irrigating agricultural land across most parts of the world. The water application efficiency of surface irrigation is typically lower than other forms of irrigation, due in part to the lack of control of applied depths. Surface irrigation involves a significantly lower capital cost and energy requirement than pressurised irrigation systems. Hence it is often the irrigation choice for developing nations, for low value crops and for large fields. Where water levels from the irrigation source permit, the levels are controlled by dikes, usually plugged by soil. This is often seen in terraced rice fields (rice paddies), where the method is used to flood or control the level of water in each distinct field. In some cases, the water is pumped, or lifted by human or animal power to the level of the land.

 
Residential flood irrigation in Phoenix, Arizona, US

Surface irrigation is even used to water urban gardens in certain areas, for example, in and around Phoenix, Arizona. The irrigated area is surrounded by a berm and the water is delivered according to a schedule set by a local irrigation district.[21]

A special form of irrigation using surface water is spate irrigation, also called floodwater harvesting. In case of a flood (spate), water is diverted to normally dry river beds (wadis) using a network of dams, gates and channels and spread over large areas. The moisture stored in the soil will be used thereafter to grow crops. Spate irrigation areas are in particular located in semi-arid or arid, mountainous regions.

Micro-irrigation

 
Drip irrigation – a dripper in action

Micro-irrigation, sometimes called localized irrigation, low volume irrigation, or trickle irrigation is a system where water is distributed under low pressure through a piped network, in a pre-determined pattern, and applied as a small discharge to each plant or adjacent to it. Traditional drip irrigation use individual emitters, subsurface drip irrigation (SDI), micro-spray or micro-sprinklers, and mini-bubbler irrigation all belong to this category of irrigation methods.[22]

Drip irrigation

 
Drip irrigation layout and its parts

Drip (or micro) irrigation, also known as trickle irrigation, functions as its name suggests. In this system, water is delivered at or near the root zone of plants, one drop at a time. This method can be the most water-efficient method of irrigation,[23] if managed properly; evaporation and runoff are minimized. The field water efficiency of drip irrigation is typically in the range of 80 to 90 percent when managed correctly.

In modern agriculture, drip irrigation is often combined with plastic mulch, further reducing evaporation, and is also the means of delivery of fertilizer. The process is known as fertigation.

Deep percolation, where water moves below the root zone, can occur if a drip system is operated for too long or if the delivery rate is too high. Drip irrigation methods range from very high-tech and computerized to low-tech and labor-intensive. Lower water pressures are usually needed than for most other types of systems, with the exception of low energy center pivot systems and surface irrigation systems, and the system can be designed for uniformity throughout a field or for precise water delivery to individual plants in a landscape containing a mix of plant species. Although it is difficult to regulate pressure on steep slopes, pressure compensating emitters are available, so the field does not have to be level. High-tech solutions involve precisely calibrated emitters located along lines of tubing that extend from a computerized set of valves.

Sprinkler irrigation

 
Crop sprinklers near Rio Vista, California, US
 
A traveling sprinkler at Millets Farm Centre, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom

In sprinkler or overhead irrigation, water is piped to one or more central locations within the field and distributed by overhead high-pressure sprinklers or guns. A system using sprinklers, sprays, or guns mounted overhead on permanently installed risers is often referred to as a solid-set irrigation system. Higher pressure sprinklers that rotate are called rotors and are driven by a ball drive, gear drive, or impact mechanism. Rotors can be designed to rotate in a full or partial circle. Guns are similar to rotors, except that they generally operate at very high pressures of 275 to 900 kPa (40 to 130 psi) and flows of 3 to 76 L/s (50 to 1200 US gal/min), usually with nozzle diameters in the range of 10 to 50 mm (0.5 to 1.9 in). Guns are used not only for irrigation, but also for industrial applications such as dust suppression and logging.

Sprinklers can also be mounted on moving platforms connected to the water source by a hose. Automatically moving wheeled systems known as traveling sprinklers may irrigate areas such as small farms, sports fields, parks, pastures, and cemeteries unattended. Most of these use a length of polyethylene tubing wound on a steel drum. As the tubing is wound on the drum powered by the irrigation water or a small gas engine, the sprinkler is pulled across the field. When the sprinkler arrives back at the reel the system shuts off. This type of system is known to most people as a "waterreel" traveling irrigation sprinkler and they are used extensively for dust suppression, irrigation, and land application of waste water.

Other travelers use a flat rubber hose that is dragged along behind while the sprinkler platform is pulled by a cable.

Center pivot

 
A small center pivot system from beginning to end
 
Rotator style pivot applicator sprinkler
 
Center pivot with drop sprinklers
 
Wheel line irrigation system in Idaho, US, 2001

Center pivot irrigation is a form of sprinkler irrigation utilising several segments of pipe (usually galvanized steel or aluminium) joined and supported by trusses, mounted on wheeled towers with sprinklers positioned along its length.[24] The system moves in a circular pattern and is fed with water from the pivot point at the center of the arc. These systems are found and used in all parts of the world and allow irrigation of all types of terrain. Newer systems have drop sprinkler heads as shown in the image that follows.

As of 2017 most center pivot systems have drops hanging from a U-shaped pipe attached at the top of the pipe with sprinkler heads that are positioned a few feet (at most) above the crop, thus limiting evaporative losses. Drops can also be used with drag hoses or bubblers that deposit the water directly on the ground between crops. Crops are often planted in a circle to conform to the center pivot. This type of system is known as LEPA (Low Energy Precision Application). Originally, most center pivots were water-powered. These were replaced by hydraulic systems (T-L Irrigation) and electric-motor-driven systems (Reinke, Valley, Zimmatic). Many modern pivots feature GPS devices.[25]

Irrigation by lateral move (side roll, wheel line, wheelmove)

A series of pipes, each with a wheel of about 1.5 m diameter permanently affixed to its midpoint, and sprinklers along its length, are coupled together. Water is supplied at one end using a large hose. After sufficient irrigation has been applied to one strip of the field, the hose is removed, the water drained from the system, and the assembly rolled either by hand or with a purpose-built mechanism, so that the sprinklers are moved to a different position across the field. The hose is reconnected. The process is repeated in a pattern until the whole field has been irrigated.

This system is less expensive to install than a center pivot, but much more labor-intensive to operate – it does not travel automatically across the field: it applies water in a stationary strip, must be drained, and then rolled to a new strip. Most systems use 100 or 130 mm (4 or 5 inch) diameter aluminum pipe. The pipe doubles both as water transport and as an axle for rotating all the wheels. A drive system (often found near the centre of the wheel line) rotates the clamped-together pipe sections as a single axle, rolling the whole wheel line. Manual adjustment of individual wheel positions may be necessary if the system becomes misaligned.

Wheel line systems are limited in the amount of water they can carry, and limited in the height of crops that can be irrigated. One useful feature of a lateral move system is that it consists of sections that can be easily disconnected, adapting to field shape as the line is moved. They are most often used for small, rectilinear, or oddly-shaped fields, hilly or mountainous regions, or in regions where labor is inexpensive.[26][27]

Lawn sprinkler systems

A lawn sprinkler system is permanently installed, as opposed to a hose-end sprinkler, which is portable. Sprinkler systems are installed in residential lawns, in commercial landscapes, for churches and schools, in public parks and cemeteries, and on golf courses. Most of the components of these irrigation systems are hidden under ground, since aesthetics are important in a landscape. A typical lawn sprinkler system will consist of one or more zones, limited in size by the capacity of the water source. Each zone will cover a designated portion of the landscape. Sections of the landscape will usually be divided by microclimate, type of plant material, and type of irrigation equipment. A landscape irrigation system may also include zones containing drip irrigation, bubblers, or other types of equipment besides sprinklers.

Although manual systems are still used, most lawn sprinkler systems may be operated automatically using an irrigation controller, sometimes called a clock or timer. Most automatic systems employ electric solenoid valves. Each zone has one or more of these valves that are wired to the controller. When the controller sends power to the valve, the valve opens, allowing water to flow to the sprinklers in that zone.

There are two main types of sprinklers used in lawn irrigation, pop-up spray heads and rotors. Spray heads have a fixed spray pattern, while rotors have one or more streams that rotate. Spray heads are used to cover smaller areas, while rotors are used for larger areas. Golf course rotors are sometimes so large that a single sprinkler is combined with a valve and called a 'valve in head'. When used in a turf area, the sprinklers are installed with the top of the head flush with the ground surface. When the system is pressurized, the head will pop up out of the ground and water the desired area until the valve closes and shuts off that zone. Once there is no more pressure in the lateral line, the sprinkler head will retract back into the ground. In flower beds or shrub areas, sprinklers may be mounted on above ground risers or even taller pop-up sprinklers may be used and installed flush as in a lawn area.

 
An impact sprinkler watering a lawn, an example of a hose-end sprinkler

Hose-end sprinklers

There are many types of hose-end sprinklers. Many of them are smaller versions of larger agricultural and landscape sprinklers, sized to work with a typical garden hose. Some have a spiked base allowing them to be temporarily stuck in the ground, while others have a sled base designed to be dragged while attached to the hose.

Subirrigation

Subirrigation has been used for many years in field crops in areas with high water tables. It is a method of artificially raising the water table to allow the soil to be moistened from below the plants' root zone. Often those systems are located on permanent grasslands in lowlands or river valleys and combined with drainage infrastructure. A system of pumping stations, canals, weirs and gates allows it to increase or decrease the water level in a network of ditches and thereby control the water table.

Subirrigation is also used in the commercial greenhouse production, usually for potted plants. Water is delivered from below, absorbed by upwards, and the excess collected for recycling. Typically, a solution of water and nutrients floods a container or flows through a trough for a short period of time, 10–20 minutes, and is then pumped back into a holding tank for reuse. Sub-irrigation in greenhouses requires fairly sophisticated, expensive equipment and management. Advantages are water and nutrient conservation, and labor savings through reduced system maintenance and automation. It is similar in principle and action to subsurface basin irrigation.

Another type of subirrigation is the self-watering container, also known as a sub-irrigated planter. This consists of a planter suspended over a reservoir with some type of wicking material such as a polyester rope. The water is drawn up the wick through capillary action.[28][29] A similar technique is the wicking bed; this too uses capillary action.

Efficiency

Modern irrigation methods are efficient enough to supply the entire field uniformly with water, so that each plant has the amount of water it needs, neither too much nor too little.[30] Water use efficiency in the field can be determined as follows:

  • Field Water Efficiency (%) = (Water Transpired by Crop ÷ Water Applied to Field) x 100

Increased irrigation efficiency has a number of positive outcomes for the farmer, the community and the wider environment. Low application efficiency infers that the amount of water applied to the field is in excess of the crop or field requirements. Increasing the application efficiency means that the amount of crop produced per unit of water increases. Improved efficiency may either be achieved by applying less water to an existing field or by using water more wisely thereby achieving higher yields in the same area of land. In some parts of the world, farmers are charged for irrigation water hence over-application has a direct financial cost to the farmer. Irrigation often requires pumping energy (either electricity or fossil fuel) to deliver water to the field or supply the correct operating pressure. Hence increased efficiency will reduce both the water cost and energy cost per unit of agricultural production. A reduction of water use on one field may mean that the farmer is able to irrigate a larger area of land, increasing total agricultural production. Low efficiency usually means that excess water is lost through seepage or runoff, both of which can result in loss of crop nutrients or pesticides with potential adverse impacts on the surrounding environment.

Improving the efficiency of irrigation is usually achieved in one of two ways, either by improving the system design or by optimising the irrigation management. Improving system design includes conversion from one form of irrigation to another (e.g. from furrow to drip irrigation) and also through small changes in the current system (for example changing flowrates and operating pressures). Irrigation management refers to the scheduling of irrigation events and decisions around how much water is applied.

Challenges

Environmental impacts

Negative impacts frequently accompany extensive irrigation.[31] Some projects which diverted surface water for irrigation dried up the water sources, which led to a more extreme regional climate.[32] Projects that relied on groundwater and pumped too much from underground aquifers created subsidence and salinization. Salinization of irrigation water in turn damaged the crops and seeped into drinking water.[32] Pests and pathogens also thrived in the irrigation canals or ponds full of still water, which created regional outbreaks of diseases like malaria and schistosomiasis.[33][34][35] Governments also used irrigation schemes to encourage migration, especially of more desirable populations into an area.[36][37][38] Additionally, some of these large nationwide schemes failed to pay off at all, costing more than any benefit gained from increased crop yields.[39][40]

Overdrafting (depletion) of underground aquifers: In the mid-20th century, the advent of diesel and electric motors led to systems that could pump groundwater out of major aquifers faster than drainage basins could refill them. This can lead to permanent loss of aquifer capacity, decreased water quality, ground subsidence, and other problems. The future of food production in such areas as the North China Plain, the Punjab region in India and Pakistan, and the Great Plains of the US is threatened by this phenomenon.[41][42]

The environmental effects of irrigation relate to the changes in quantity and quality of soil and water as a result of irrigation and the subsequent effects on natural and social conditions in river basins and downstream of an irrigation scheme. The effects stem from the altered hydrological conditions caused by the installation and operation of the irrigation scheme.

Amongst some of these problems is depletion of underground aquifers through overdrafting. Soil can be over-irrigated due to poor distribution uniformity or management wastes water, chemicals, and may lead to water pollution. Over-irrigation can cause deep drainage from rising water tables that can lead to problems of irrigation salinity requiring watertable control by some form of subsurface land drainage. However, if the soil is under irrigated, it gives poor soil salinity control which leads to increased soil salinity with the consequent buildup of toxic salts on the soil surface in areas with high evaporation. This requires either leaching to remove these salts and a method of drainage to carry the salts away. Irrigation with saline or high-sodium water may damage soil structure owing to the formation of alkaline soil.

Technical challenges

 
Overirrigation because of poor distribution uniformity in the furrows. Potato plants were oppressed and turned yellow

Irrigation schemes involve solving numerous engineering and economic problems while minimizing negative environmental consequences.[31] Such problems include:

  • Ground subsidence (e.g. New Orleans, Louisiana)
  • Underirrigation or irrigation giving only just enough water for the plant (e.g. in drip line irrigation) gives poor soil salinity control which leads to increased soil salinity with consequent buildup of toxic salts on soil surface in areas with high evaporation. This requires either leaching to remove these salts and a method of drainage to carry the salts away. When using drip lines, the leaching is best done regularly at certain intervals (with only a slight excess of water), so that the salt is flushed back under the plant's roots.[43]
  • Drainage front instability, also known as viscous fingering, where an unstable drainage front results in a pattern of fingers and viscous entrapped saturated zones.
  • Overirrigation because of poor distribution uniformity or management wastes water, chemicals, and may lead to water pollution.[44]
  • Deep drainage (from over-irrigation) may result in rising water tables which in some instances will lead to problems of irrigation salinity requiring watertable control by some form of subsurface land drainage.[45][46]
  • Irrigation with saline or high-sodium water may damage soil structure owing to the formation of alkaline soil.
  • Clogging of filters: algae can clog filters, drip installations, and nozzles. Chlorination, algaecide, UV and ultrasonic methods can be used for algae control in irrigation systems.
  • Complications in accurately measuring irrigation performance which changes over time and space using measures such as productivity, efficiency, equity and adequacy.[47]

Social aspects

  • Competition for surface water rights.[48]
  • Assisting smallholders in sustainably and collectively managing irrigation technology and changes in technology.[49]

History

Ancient history

 
Animal-powered irrigation, Upper Egypt, ca. 1846

Archaeological investigation has found evidence of irrigation in areas lacking sufficient natural rainfall to support crops for rainfed agriculture. Some of the earliest known use of the technology dates to the 6th millennium BC in Khuzistan in the south-west of present-day Iran.[50][51] The site of Choga Mami, in Iraq on the border with Iran, is believed to be the earliest to show the first canal irrigation in operation at about 6000 BCE.[52]

Irrigation was used as a means of manipulation of water in the alluvial plains of the Indus valley civilization, the application of which is estimated to have begun around 4500 BC and drastically increased the size and prosperity of their agricultural settlements.[53] The Indus Valley Civilization developed sophisticated irrigation and water-storage systems, including artificial reservoirs at Girnar dated to 3000 BCE, and an early canal irrigation system from c. 2600 BCE. Large-scale agriculture was practiced, with an extensive network of canals used for the purpose of irrigation.[53][54]

Farmers in the Mesopotamian plain used irrigation from at least the third millennium BCE.[55] They developed perennial irrigation, regularly watering crops throughout the growing season by coaxing water through a matrix of small channels formed in the field.[56]Ancient Egyptians practiced basin irrigation using the flooding of the Nile to inundate land plots which had been surrounded by dykes. The flood water remained until the fertile sediment had settled before the engineers returned the surplus to the watercourse.[57] There is evidence of the ancient Egyptian pharaoh Amenemhet III in the twelfth dynasty (about 1800 BCE) using the natural lake of the Faiyum Oasis as a reservoir to store surpluses of water for use during dry seasons. The lake swelled annually from the flooding of the Nile.[58]

 
Young engineers restoring and developing the old Mughal irrigation system in 1847 during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah II in Indian subcontinent

The Ancient Nubians developed a form of irrigation by using a waterwheel-like device called a sakia. Irrigation began in Nubia some time between the third and second millennia BCE.[59] It largely depended upon the flood waters that would flow through the Nile River and other rivers in what is now the Sudan.[60]

In sub-Saharan Africa irrigation reached the Niger River region cultures and civilizations by the first or second millennium BCE and was based on wet-season flooding and water harvesting.[61][62]

Evidence of terrace irrigation occurs in pre-Columbian America, early Syria, India, and China.[57] In the Zana Valley of the Andes Mountains in Peru, archaeologists have found remains of three irrigation canals radiocarbon-dated from the 4th millennium BCE, the 3rd millennium BCE and the 9th century CE. These canals provide the earliest record of irrigation in the New World. Traces of a canal possibly dating from the 5th millennium BCE were found under the 4th-millennium canal.[63]

Ancient Persia (modern day Iran) used irrigation as far back as the 6th millennium BCE to grow barley in areas with insufficient natural rainfall.[64][50] The Qanats, developed in ancient Persia about 800 BCE, are among the oldest known irrigation methods still in use today. They are now found in Asia, the Middle East and North Africa. The system comprises a network of vertical wells and gently sloping tunnels driven into the sides of cliffs and of steep hills to tap groundwater.[65] The noria, a water wheel with clay pots around the rim powered by the flow of the stream (or by animals where the water source was still), first came into use at about this time among Roman settlers in North Africa. By 150 BCE the pots were fitted with valves to allow smoother filling as they were forced into the water.[66]

Sri Lanka

The irrigation works of ancient Sri Lanka, the earliest dating from about 300 BCE in the reign of King Pandukabhaya, and under continuous development for the next thousand years, were one of the most complex irrigation systems of the ancient world. In addition to underground canals, the Sinhalese were the first to build completely artificial reservoirs to store water.[citation needed] These reservoirs and canal systems were used primarily to irrigate paddy fields, which require a lot of water to cultivate. Most of these irrigation systems still exist undamaged up to now, in Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa, because of the advanced and precise engineering. The system was extensively restored and further extended[by whom?] during the reign of King Parakrama Bahu (1153–1186 CE).[67]

China

 
Inside a karez tunnel at Turpan, Xinjiang, China

The oldest known hydraulic engineers of China were Sunshu Ao (6th century BCE) of the Spring and Autumn period and Ximen Bao (5th century BCE) of the Warring States period, both of whom worked on large irrigation projects. In the Sichuan region belonging to the state of Qin of ancient China, the Dujiangyan Irrigation System devised by the Qin Chinese hydrologist and irrigation engineer Li Bing was built in 256 BCE to irrigate a vast area of farmland that today still supplies water.[68] By the 2nd century AD, during the Han Dynasty, the Chinese also used chain pumps which lifted water from a lower elevation to a higher one.[69] These were powered by manual foot-pedal, hydraulic waterwheels, or rotating mechanical wheels pulled by oxen.[70] The water was used for public works, providing water for urban residential quarters and palace gardens, but mostly for irrigation of farmland canals and channels in the fields.[71]

Korea

Korea, Jang Yeong-sil, a Korean engineer of the Joseon Dynasty, under the active direction of the king, Sejong the Great, invented the world's first rain-gauge, uryanggye (Korean:우량계) in 1441. It was installed in irrigation tanks[by whom?] as part of a nationwide system to measure and collect rainfall for agricultural applications. With this instrument, planners and farmers could make better use of the information gathered in the[which?] survey.[72]

North America

The earliest agricultural irrigation canal system known in the area of the present-day United States dates to between 1200 B.C. and 800 B.C. and was discovered by Desert Archaeology, Inc. in Marana, Arizona (adjacent to Tucson) in 2009.[73] The irrigation-canal system predates the Hohokam culture by two thousand years and belongs to an unidentified culture. In North America, the Hohokam were the only culture known to rely on irrigation canals to water their crops, and their irrigation systems supported the largest population in the Southwest by AD 1300. The Hohokam constructed an assortment of simple canals combined with weirs in their various agricultural pursuits. Between the 7th and 14th centuries they built and maintained extensive irrigation networks along the lower Salt and middle Gila Rivers that rivaled the complexity of those used in the ancient Near East, Egypt, and China. These were constructed using relatively simple excavation tools, without the benefit of advanced engineering technologies, and achieved drops of a few feet per mile, balancing erosion and siltation. The Hohokam cultivated varieties of cotton, tobacco, maize, beans and squash, as well as harvesting an assortment of wild plants. Late in the Hohokam Chronological Sequence, they also used extensive dry-farming systems, primarily to grow agave for food and fiber. Their reliance on agricultural strategies based on canal irrigation, vital in their less-than-hospitable desert environment and arid climate, provided the basis for the aggregation of rural populations into stable urban centers.[74][need quotation to verify]

South America

The oldest known irrigation canals in the Americas are in the desert of northern Peru in the Zaña valley near the hamlet of Nanchoc. The canals have been radiocarbon dated to at least 3400 B.C. and possibly as old as 4700 B.C. The canals at that time irrigated crops such as peanuts, squash, manioc, chenopods, a relative of Quinoa, and later maize.[75]

Modern history

In the 20th century, global anxiety specifically about the American cotton monopoly fueled many empirical irrigation projects: Britain began developing irrigation in India, the Ottomans in Egypt, the French in Algeria, the Portuguese in Angola, the Germans in Togo, and Soviets in Central Asia.[8]

American West

Irrigated land in the United States increased from 300,000 acres in 1880 to 4.1 million in 1890, then to 7.3 million in 1900.[40] Two thirds of this irrigation sources from groundwater or small ponds and reservoirs, while the other one third comes from large dams.[76] One of the main attractions of irrigation in the West was its increased dependability compared to rainfall-watered agriculture in the East. Proponents argued that farmers with a dependable water supply could more easily get loans from bankers interested in this more predictable farming model.[77] Most irrigation in the Great Plains region derived from underground aquifers. Euro-American farmers who colonized the region in the 19th century tried to grow the commodity crops that they were used to, like wheat, corn, and alfalfa, but rainfall stifled their growing capacity. Between the late 1800s and the 1930s, farmers used wind-powered pumps to draw groundwater. These windpumps had limited power, but the development of gas-powered pumps in the mid-1930s pushed wells deep into the Ogallala Aquifer. Farmers irrigated fields by laying pipes across the field with sprinklers at intervals, a labor-intensive process, until the advent of the center-pivot sprinkler after WWII, which made irrigation significantly easier.[78] By the 1970s farmers drained the aquifer ten times faster than it could recharge, and by 1993 they had removed half of the accessible water.[79]

Large-scale federal funding and intervention pushed through the majority of irrigation projects in the West, especially in California, Colorado, Arizona, and Nevada. At first, plans to increase irrigated farmland, largely by giving land to farmers and asking them to find water, failed across the board. Congress passed the Desert Land Act in 1877 and the Carey Act in 1894, which only marginally increased irrigation.[80] Only in 1902 Congress passed the National Reclamation Act, which channeled money from the sale of western public lands, in parcels up to 160 acres large, into irrigation projects on public or private land in the arid West.[81] The Congressmen who passed the law, as well as their wealthy supporters, supported Western irrigation because it would increase American exports, ‘reclaim’ the West, and push the Eastern poor out West in search of a better life.[82]

While the National Reclamation Act was the most successful piece of federal irrigation legislation, the implementation of the act did not go as planned. Originally, the Reclamation Service planned to construct a small number of projects that would allow engineers to learn from the process, but President Roosevelt chose instead push as many irrigation projects through as fast as possible. The Reclamation Service also chose to push most of the Act’s money toward construction rather than settlement, so the Service overwhelmingly prioritized building large dams like the Hoover Dam.[83] Over the 20th century Congress and state governments grew more frustrated with the Reclamation Service and the irrigation schemes in general. Frederick Newell, head of the Reclamation Service, proving uncompromising and difficult to work with, falling crop prices, resistance to delay debt payments, and refusal to begin new projects until the completion of old ones all contributed.[84] The Reclamation Extension Act of 1914, transferring a significant amount of irrigation decision-making power regarding irrigation projects from the Reclamation Service to Congress, was in many ways a result of an increasing political unpopularity of the Reclamation Service.[85]

In the lower Colorado Basin of Arizona, Colorado, and Nevada, the states derive irrigation water largely from rivers, especially the Colorado River, which irrigates more than 4.5 million acres of land, with a less significant amount coming from groundwater.[86] In the 1952 case Arizona v. California, Arizona sued California for increased access to the Colorado, under the grounds that their groundwater supply could not sustain their almost entirely irrigation-based agricultural economy, which they won.[87] California, which began irrigating in earnest in the 1870s in San Joaquin Valley,[88] had passed the Wright Act of 1887 permitting agricultural communities to construct and operate needed irrigation works.[89] The Colorado also irrigates large fields in California’s Imperial Valley, fed by the National Reclamation Act-built All-American Canal.[90][91]

Soviet Central Asia

When the Bolsheviks conquered Central Asia in 1917, the native Kazakhs, Uzbeks, and Turkmens used minimal irrigation. The Slavic immigrants pushed into the area by the Tsarist government[92] brought their own irrigation methods, including waterwheels, the use of rice paddies to restore salted land, and underground irrigation channels. Russians dismissed these techniques as crude and inefficient. Despite this, in absence of other solutions, tsarist officials maintained these systems through the late 19th century.[93]

Before conquering the area, the Russian government accepted a 1911 American proposal to send hydraulic experts to Central Asia to investigate the potential for large-scale irrigation. A 1918 decree by Lenin then encouraged irrigation development in the region, and development began in the 1930s. When it did, Stalin and other Soviet leaders prioritized large-scale, ambitious hydraulic projects, especially along the Volga River. The Soviet irrigation push stemmed largely from their late 19th century fears of the American cotton monopoly and subsequent desire to achieve cotton self-sufficiency.[94] They had built up their textile manufacturing industry in the 19th century, requiring increased cotton and irrigation, as the region did not receive enough rainfall to support cotton farming.[93]

The Russians built dams on the Don and Kuban Rivers for irrigation, removing freshwater flow from the Sea of Azov and making it much saltier. Depletion and salinization scourged other areas of the Russian irrigation project. In the 1950s Soviet officials began also diverting the Syr Darya and the Amu Darya, which fed the Aral Sea. Before diversion, the rivers delivered 55km3 of water to the Aral Sea per year, but after they only delivered 6km3 to the Sea. Because of its reduced inflow, the Aral Sea covered less than half of its original seabed, which made the regional climate more extreme and created airborne salinization, lowering nearby crop yields.[95]

By 1975, the USSR used eight times as much water as they had in 1913, mostly for irrigation. Russia’s expansion of irrigation began to decrease in the late 1980s, and irrigated hectares in Central Asia capped out at 7 million. Mikhail Gorbachev killed a proposed plan to reverse the Ob and Yenisei for irrigation in 1986, and the breakup of the USSR in 1991 ended Russian investment in Central Asian cotton irrigation.[96]

Africa

Different irrigation schemes with a variety of goals and success rates have been implemented across Africa in the 20th century, but have all been influenced by colonial forces. The Tana River Irrigation Scheme in eastern Kenya, completed between 1948 and 1963, opened up new lands for agriculture, and the Kenyan government attempted to resettle the area with detainees from the Mau Mau uprising.[97] Libya’s underground water resources were discovered by Italian oil drillers during the Italian colonization of Libya. This water lay dormant until 1969, when Muammar al-Gaddafi and American Armand Hammer built the Great Man-Made River to deliver the Saharan water to the coast. The water largely contributed to irrigation but cost four to ten times more than the crops it produced were worth.[98]

In 1912, the Union of South Africa created an irrigation department and began investing in water storage infrastructure and irrigation. The government used irrigation and dam-building to further social goals like poverty relief, both by creating construction jobs for poor whites and by creating irrigation schemes to increase white farming. One of their first major irrigation projects was the Hartbeespoort Dam, begun in 1916 as a mechanism to elevate the living conditions of the ‘poor whites’ in the region and eventually completed as a ‘whites only’ employment opportunity.[99] The Pretoria irrigation scheme, Kammanassie project, and Buchuberg irrigation scheme on the Orange River all followed in the same vein in the 1920s and 30s.[37]

In Egypt, modern irrigation began with Muhammad Ali Pasha in the mid-1800s, who sought to achieve Egyptian independence from the Ottomans through increased trade with Europe—specifically cotton exportation.[100] His administration proposed replacing the traditional Nile basin irrigation, which took advantage of the annual ebb and flow of the Nile, with irrigation barrages in the lower Nile which better suited cotton production. Egypt devoted 105,000 ha to cotton in 1861, which increased fivefold by 1865. The majority of their exports were shipped to England, and the United-States-Civil-War-induced cotton scarcity in the 1860s cemented Egypt as England’s cotton producer.[101] As the Egyptian economy became more dependent on cotton in the 20th century, it became more important to control even small Nile floods. Cotton production was more at risk of destruction than more common crops like barley or wheat.[102] After the British occupation of Egypt in 1882, the British intensified the conversion to perennial irrigation with the construction of the Delta Barrage, the Assiut Barrage, and the first Aswan Dam. Perennial irrigation decreased local control over water and made traditional subsistence farming or the farming of other crops incredibly difficult, eventually contributing to widespread peasant bankruptcy and the 1879-1882 ‘Urabi revolt.[103]

Examples by country

Gallery

See also

References

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  • Worster, Donald. Rivers of Empire: Water, Aridity, and the Growth of the American West. New York ; Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1992.

External links

  • International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage (ICID)
  • at the Water Quality Information Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture
  • AQUASTAT: FAO's global information system on water and agriculture

irrigation, this, article, about, irrigation, agriculture, landscapes, other, uses, disambiguation, watering, redirects, here, river, germany, wätering, also, referred, watering, practice, applying, controlled, amounts, water, land, help, grow, crops, landscap. This article is about irrigation for agriculture and landscapes For other uses see Irrigation disambiguation Watering redirects here For the river in Germany see Watering Irrigation also referred to as watering is the practice of applying controlled amounts of water to land to help grow crops landscape plants and lawns Irrigation has been a key aspect of agriculture for over 5 000 years and has been developed by many cultures around the world Irrigation helps to grow crops maintain landscapes and revegetate disturbed soils in dry areas and during times of below average rainfall In addition to these uses irrigation is also employed to protect crops from frost 1 suppress weed growth in grain fields and prevent soil consolidation It is also used to cool livestock reduce dust dispose of sewage and support mining operations Drainage which involves the removal of surface and sub surface water from a given location is often studied in conjunction with irrigation Irrigation of agricultural fields in Andalusia Spain Irrigation canal on the left There are several methods of irrigation that differ in how water is supplied to plants Surface irrigation also known as gravity irrigation is the oldest form of irrigation and has been in use for thousands of years In sprinkler irrigation water is piped to one or more central locations within the field and distributed by overhead high pressure water devices Micro irrigation is a system that distributes water under low pressure through a piped network and applies it as a small discharge to each plant Micro irrigation uses less pressure and water flow than sprinkler irrigation Drip irrigation delivers water directly to the root zone of plants Subirrigation has been used in field crops in areas with high water tables for many years It involves artificially raising the water table to moisten the soil below the root zone of plants Irrigation water can come from groundwater extracted from springs or by using wells from surface water withdrawn from rivers lakes or reservoirs or from non conventional sources like treated wastewater desalinated water drainage water or fog collection Irrigation can be supplementary to rainfall which is common in many parts of the world as rainfed agriculture or it can be full irrigation where crops rarely rely on any contribution from rainfall Full irrigation is less common and only occurs in arid landscapes with very low rainfall or when crops are grown in semi arid areas outside of rainy seasons The environmental effects of irrigation relate to the changes in quantity and quality of soil and water as a result of irrigation and the subsequent effects on natural and social conditions in river basins and downstream of an irrigation scheme The effects stem from the altered hydrological conditions caused by the installation and operation of the irrigation scheme Amongst some of these problems is depletion of underground aquifers through overdrafting Soil can be over irrigated due to poor distribution uniformity or management wastes water chemicals and may lead to water pollution Over irrigation can cause deep drainage from rising water tables that can lead to problems of irrigation salinity requiring watertable control by some form of subsurface land drainage Contents 1 Extent 1 1 Global overview 2 Water sources 2 1 Groundwater and surface water 2 2 Treated or untreated wastewater 2 3 Other sources 2 4 Competition for water resources 3 Irrigation methods 3 1 Surface irrigation 3 2 Micro irrigation 3 2 1 Drip irrigation 3 3 Sprinkler irrigation 3 3 1 Center pivot 3 3 2 Irrigation by lateral move side roll wheel line wheelmove 3 3 3 Lawn sprinkler systems 3 3 4 Hose end sprinklers 3 4 Subirrigation 4 Efficiency 5 Challenges 5 1 Environmental impacts 5 2 Technical challenges 5 3 Social aspects 6 History 6 1 Ancient history 6 1 1 Sri Lanka 6 1 2 China 6 1 3 Korea 6 1 4 North America 6 1 5 South America 6 2 Modern history 6 2 1 American West 6 2 2 Soviet Central Asia 6 2 3 Africa 7 Examples by country 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Sources 11 External linksExtent Edit Share of agricultural land which is irrigated 2015 In year 2000 the total fertile land was 2 788 000 km2 689 million acres and it was equipped with irrigation infrastructure worldwide About 68 of this area is in Asia 17 in the Americas 9 in Europe 5 in Africa and 1 in Oceania The largest contiguous areas of high irrigation density are found in Northern and Eastern India and Pakistan along the Ganges and Indus rivers in the Hai He Huang He and Yangtze basins in China along the Nile river in Egypt and Sudan and in the Mississippi Missouri river basin the Southern Great Plains and in parts of California in the United States Smaller irrigation areas are spread across almost all populated parts of the world 2 By 2012 the area of irrigated land had increased to an estimated total of 3 242 917 km2 801 million acres which is nearly the size of India 3 The irrigation of 20 of farming land accounts for the production of 40 of food production 4 5 Global overview Edit The scale of irrigation increased dramatically over the 20th century In 1800 8 million hectares globally were irrigated in 1950 94 million hectares and in 1990 235 million hectares By 1990 30 of the global food production came from irrigated land 6 Irrigation techniques across the globe includes canals redirecting surface water 7 8 groundwater pumping and diverting water from dams National governments lead most irrigation schemes within their borders but private investors 9 and other nations 8 especially the United States 10 China 11 and European countries like the United Kingdom 12 also fund and organize some schemes within other nations Irrigation enables the production of more crops especially commodity crops in areas which otherwise could not support them Countries frequently invested in irrigation to increase wheat rice or cotton production often with the overarching goal of increasing self sufficiency 12 Water sources Edit Irrigation is underway by pump enabled extraction directly from the Gumti seen in the background in Comilla Bangladesh Groundwater and surface water Edit Grapes in Petrolina Brazil only made possible in this semi arid area by drip irrigation Irrigation water can come from groundwater extracted from springs or by using wells from surface water withdrawn from rivers lakes or reservoirs or from non conventional sources like treated wastewater desalinated water drainage water or fog collection While floodwater harvesting belongs to the accepted irrigation methods rainwater harvesting is usually not considered as a form of irrigation Rainwater harvesting is the collection of runoff water from roofs or unused land and the concentration of this Treated or untreated wastewater Edit This section is an excerpt from Reclaimed water Agricultural reuse edit Irrigation with recycled municipal wastewater can also serve to fertilize plants if it contains nutrients such as nitrogen phosphorus and potassium There are benefits of using recycled water for irrigation including the lower cost compared to some other sources and consistency of supply regardless of season climatic conditions and associated water restrictions When reclaimed water is used for irrigation in agriculture the nutrient nitrogen and phosphorus content of the treated wastewater has the benefit of acting as a fertilizer 13 This can make the reuse of excreta contained in sewage attractive 14 The irrigation water can be used in different ways on different crops For food crops to be eaten raw crops which are intended for human consumption to be eaten raw or unprocessed For processed food crops crops which are intended for human consumption not to be eaten raw but after treatment process i e cooked industrially processed 15 It can also be used on non food crops crops which are not intended for human consumption e g pastures forage fiber ornamental seed forest and turf crops 16 This section is an excerpt from Reclaimed water Risks in agricultural reuse edit In developing countries agriculture is increasingly using untreated municipal wastewater for irrigation often in an unsafe manner Cities provide lucrative markets for fresh produce so are attractive to farmers However because agriculture has to compete for increasingly scarce water resources with industry and municipal users there is often no alternative for farmers but to use water polluted with urban waste directly to water their crops There can be significant health hazards related to using untreated wastewater in agriculture Municipal wastewater can contain a mixture of chemical and biological pollutants In low income countries there are often high levels of pathogens from excreta In emerging nations where industrial development is outpacing environmental regulation there are increasing risks from inorganic and organic chemicals The World Health Organization has developed guidelines for safe use of wastewater in 2006 14 These guidelines advocate a multiple barrier approach wastewater use for example by encouraging farmers to adopt various risk reducing behaviors These include ceasing irrigation a few days before harvesting to allow pathogens to die off in the sunlight applying water carefully so it does not contaminate leaves likely to be eaten raw cleaning vegetables with disinfectant or allowing fecal sludge used in farming to dry before being used as a human manure 13 Drawbacks or risks often mentioned include the content of potentially harmful substances such as bacteria heavy metals or organic pollutants including pharmaceuticals personal care products and pesticides Irrigation with wastewater can have both positive and negative effects on soil and plants depending on the composition of the wastewater and on the soil or plant characteristics 17 Other sources Edit Irrigation water can also come from non conventional sources like treated wastewater desalinated water drainage water or fog collection In countries where humid air sweeps through at night water can be obtained by condensation onto cold surfaces This is practiced in the vineyards at Lanzarote using stones to condense water Fog collectors are also made of canvas or foil sheets Using condensate from air conditioning units as a water source is also becoming more popular in large urban areas As of November 2019 update a Glasgow based startup has helped a farmer in Scotland to establish edible saltmarsh crops irrigated with sea water An acre of previously marginal land has been put under cultivation to grow samphire sea blite and sea aster these plants yield a higher profit than potatoes The land is flood irrigated twice a day to simulate tidal flooding the water is pumped from the sea using wind power Additional benefits are soil remediation and carbon sequestration 18 19 Competition for water resources Edit Main article water scarcity Until 1960s there were fewer than half the current number of people on the planet People were not as wealthy as today consumed fewer calories and ate less meat so less water was needed to produce their food They required a third of the volume of water we presently take from rivers Today the competition for water resources is much more intense This is because there are now more than seven billion people on the planet increasing the likelihood of overconsumption of food produced by water thirsty animal agriculture and intensive farming practices and there is increasing competition for water from industry urbanisation and biofuel crops Farmers will have to strive to increase productivity to meet growing demands for food while industry and cities find ways to use water more efficiently 20 Successful agriculture is dependent upon farmers having sufficient access to water However water scarcity is already a critical constraint to farming in many parts of the world Irrigation methods EditThere are several methods of irrigation They vary in how the water is supplied to the plants The goal is to apply the water to the plants as uniformly as possible so that each plant has the amount of water it needs neither too much nor too little Irrigation can also be understood whether it is supplementary to rainfall as happens in many parts of the world or whether it is full irrigation whereby crops rarely depend on any contribution from rainfall Full irrigation is less common and only happens in arid landscapes experiencing very low rainfall or when crops are grown in semi arid areas outside of any rainy seasons Surface irrigation Edit Main article Surface irrigation Basin flood irrigation of wheat Surface irrigation also known as gravity irrigation is the oldest form of irrigation and has been in use for thousands of years In surface furrow flood or level basin irrigation systems water moves across the surface of agricultural lands in order to wet it and infiltrate into the soil Water moves by following gravity or the slope of the land Surface irrigation can be subdivided into furrow border strip or basin irrigation It is often called flood irrigation when the irrigation results in flooding or near flooding of the cultivated land Historically surface irrigation is the most common method of irrigating agricultural land across most parts of the world The water application efficiency of surface irrigation is typically lower than other forms of irrigation due in part to the lack of control of applied depths Surface irrigation involves a significantly lower capital cost and energy requirement than pressurised irrigation systems Hence it is often the irrigation choice for developing nations for low value crops and for large fields Where water levels from the irrigation source permit the levels are controlled by dikes usually plugged by soil This is often seen in terraced rice fields rice paddies where the method is used to flood or control the level of water in each distinct field In some cases the water is pumped or lifted by human or animal power to the level of the land Residential flood irrigation in Phoenix Arizona US Surface irrigation is even used to water urban gardens in certain areas for example in and around Phoenix Arizona The irrigated area is surrounded by a berm and the water is delivered according to a schedule set by a local irrigation district 21 A special form of irrigation using surface water is spate irrigation also called floodwater harvesting In case of a flood spate water is diverted to normally dry river beds wadis using a network of dams gates and channels and spread over large areas The moisture stored in the soil will be used thereafter to grow crops Spate irrigation areas are in particular located in semi arid or arid mountainous regions Micro irrigation Edit Main article Micro irrigation Drip irrigation a dripper in action Micro irrigation sometimes called localized irrigation low volume irrigation or trickle irrigation is a system where water is distributed under low pressure through a piped network in a pre determined pattern and applied as a small discharge to each plant or adjacent to it Traditional drip irrigation use individual emitters subsurface drip irrigation SDI micro spray or micro sprinklers and mini bubbler irrigation all belong to this category of irrigation methods 22 Drip irrigation Edit Drip irrigation layout and its parts Main article Drip irrigation Drip or micro irrigation also known as trickle irrigation functions as its name suggests In this system water is delivered at or near the root zone of plants one drop at a time This method can be the most water efficient method of irrigation 23 if managed properly evaporation and runoff are minimized The field water efficiency of drip irrigation is typically in the range of 80 to 90 percent when managed correctly In modern agriculture drip irrigation is often combined with plastic mulch further reducing evaporation and is also the means of delivery of fertilizer The process is known as fertigation Deep percolation where water moves below the root zone can occur if a drip system is operated for too long or if the delivery rate is too high Drip irrigation methods range from very high tech and computerized to low tech and labor intensive Lower water pressures are usually needed than for most other types of systems with the exception of low energy center pivot systems and surface irrigation systems and the system can be designed for uniformity throughout a field or for precise water delivery to individual plants in a landscape containing a mix of plant species Although it is difficult to regulate pressure on steep slopes pressure compensating emitters are available so the field does not have to be level High tech solutions involve precisely calibrated emitters located along lines of tubing that extend from a computerized set of valves Sprinkler irrigation Edit Crop sprinklers near Rio Vista California US A traveling sprinkler at Millets Farm Centre Oxfordshire United Kingdom Further information Irrigation sprinkler In sprinkler or overhead irrigation water is piped to one or more central locations within the field and distributed by overhead high pressure sprinklers or guns A system using sprinklers sprays or guns mounted overhead on permanently installed risers is often referred to as a solid set irrigation system Higher pressure sprinklers that rotate are called rotors and are driven by a ball drive gear drive or impact mechanism Rotors can be designed to rotate in a full or partial circle Guns are similar to rotors except that they generally operate at very high pressures of 275 to 900 kPa 40 to 130 psi and flows of 3 to 76 L s 50 to 1200 US gal min usually with nozzle diameters in the range of 10 to 50 mm 0 5 to 1 9 in Guns are used not only for irrigation but also for industrial applications such as dust suppression and logging Sprinklers can also be mounted on moving platforms connected to the water source by a hose Automatically moving wheeled systems known as traveling sprinklers may irrigate areas such as small farms sports fields parks pastures and cemeteries unattended Most of these use a length of polyethylene tubing wound on a steel drum As the tubing is wound on the drum powered by the irrigation water or a small gas engine the sprinkler is pulled across the field When the sprinkler arrives back at the reel the system shuts off This type of system is known to most people as a waterreel traveling irrigation sprinkler and they are used extensively for dust suppression irrigation and land application of waste water Other travelers use a flat rubber hose that is dragged along behind while the sprinkler platform is pulled by a cable Center pivot Edit A small center pivot system from beginning to end Rotator style pivot applicator sprinkler Center pivot with drop sprinklers Wheel line irrigation system in Idaho US 2001 Main article Center pivot irrigation Center pivot irrigation Center pivot irrigation is a form of sprinkler irrigation utilising several segments of pipe usually galvanized steel or aluminium joined and supported by trusses mounted on wheeled towers with sprinklers positioned along its length 24 The system moves in a circular pattern and is fed with water from the pivot point at the center of the arc These systems are found and used in all parts of the world and allow irrigation of all types of terrain Newer systems have drop sprinkler heads as shown in the image that follows As of 2017 update most center pivot systems have drops hanging from a U shaped pipe attached at the top of the pipe with sprinkler heads that are positioned a few feet at most above the crop thus limiting evaporative losses Drops can also be used with drag hoses or bubblers that deposit the water directly on the ground between crops Crops are often planted in a circle to conform to the center pivot This type of system is known as LEPA Low Energy Precision Application Originally most center pivots were water powered These were replaced by hydraulic systems T L Irrigation and electric motor driven systems Reinke Valley Zimmatic Many modern pivots feature GPS devices 25 Irrigation by lateral move side roll wheel line wheelmove Edit A series of pipes each with a wheel of about 1 5 m diameter permanently affixed to its midpoint and sprinklers along its length are coupled together Water is supplied at one end using a large hose After sufficient irrigation has been applied to one strip of the field the hose is removed the water drained from the system and the assembly rolled either by hand or with a purpose built mechanism so that the sprinklers are moved to a different position across the field The hose is reconnected The process is repeated in a pattern until the whole field has been irrigated This system is less expensive to install than a center pivot but much more labor intensive to operate it does not travel automatically across the field it applies water in a stationary strip must be drained and then rolled to a new strip Most systems use 100 or 130 mm 4 or 5 inch diameter aluminum pipe The pipe doubles both as water transport and as an axle for rotating all the wheels A drive system often found near the centre of the wheel line rotates the clamped together pipe sections as a single axle rolling the whole wheel line Manual adjustment of individual wheel positions may be necessary if the system becomes misaligned Wheel line systems are limited in the amount of water they can carry and limited in the height of crops that can be irrigated One useful feature of a lateral move system is that it consists of sections that can be easily disconnected adapting to field shape as the line is moved They are most often used for small rectilinear or oddly shaped fields hilly or mountainous regions or in regions where labor is inexpensive 26 27 Lawn sprinkler systems Edit A lawn sprinkler system is permanently installed as opposed to a hose end sprinkler which is portable Sprinkler systems are installed in residential lawns in commercial landscapes for churches and schools in public parks and cemeteries and on golf courses Most of the components of these irrigation systems are hidden under ground since aesthetics are important in a landscape A typical lawn sprinkler system will consist of one or more zones limited in size by the capacity of the water source Each zone will cover a designated portion of the landscape Sections of the landscape will usually be divided by microclimate type of plant material and type of irrigation equipment A landscape irrigation system may also include zones containing drip irrigation bubblers or other types of equipment besides sprinklers Although manual systems are still used most lawn sprinkler systems may be operated automatically using an irrigation controller sometimes called a clock or timer Most automatic systems employ electric solenoid valves Each zone has one or more of these valves that are wired to the controller When the controller sends power to the valve the valve opens allowing water to flow to the sprinklers in that zone There are two main types of sprinklers used in lawn irrigation pop up spray heads and rotors Spray heads have a fixed spray pattern while rotors have one or more streams that rotate Spray heads are used to cover smaller areas while rotors are used for larger areas Golf course rotors are sometimes so large that a single sprinkler is combined with a valve and called a valve in head When used in a turf area the sprinklers are installed with the top of the head flush with the ground surface When the system is pressurized the head will pop up out of the ground and water the desired area until the valve closes and shuts off that zone Once there is no more pressure in the lateral line the sprinkler head will retract back into the ground In flower beds or shrub areas sprinklers may be mounted on above ground risers or even taller pop up sprinklers may be used and installed flush as in a lawn area An impact sprinkler watering a lawn an example of a hose end sprinkler Hose end sprinklers Edit There are many types of hose end sprinklers Many of them are smaller versions of larger agricultural and landscape sprinklers sized to work with a typical garden hose Some have a spiked base allowing them to be temporarily stuck in the ground while others have a sled base designed to be dragged while attached to the hose Subirrigation Edit Subirrigation has been used for many years in field crops in areas with high water tables It is a method of artificially raising the water table to allow the soil to be moistened from below the plants root zone Often those systems are located on permanent grasslands in lowlands or river valleys and combined with drainage infrastructure A system of pumping stations canals weirs and gates allows it to increase or decrease the water level in a network of ditches and thereby control the water table Subirrigation is also used in the commercial greenhouse production usually for potted plants Water is delivered from below absorbed by upwards and the excess collected for recycling Typically a solution of water and nutrients floods a container or flows through a trough for a short period of time 10 20 minutes and is then pumped back into a holding tank for reuse Sub irrigation in greenhouses requires fairly sophisticated expensive equipment and management Advantages are water and nutrient conservation and labor savings through reduced system maintenance and automation It is similar in principle and action to subsurface basin irrigation Another type of subirrigation is the self watering container also known as a sub irrigated planter This consists of a planter suspended over a reservoir with some type of wicking material such as a polyester rope The water is drawn up the wick through capillary action 28 29 A similar technique is the wicking bed this too uses capillary action Efficiency EditModern irrigation methods are efficient enough to supply the entire field uniformly with water so that each plant has the amount of water it needs neither too much nor too little 30 Water use efficiency in the field can be determined as follows Field Water Efficiency Water Transpired by Crop Water Applied to Field x 100Increased irrigation efficiency has a number of positive outcomes for the farmer the community and the wider environment Low application efficiency infers that the amount of water applied to the field is in excess of the crop or field requirements Increasing the application efficiency means that the amount of crop produced per unit of water increases Improved efficiency may either be achieved by applying less water to an existing field or by using water more wisely thereby achieving higher yields in the same area of land In some parts of the world farmers are charged for irrigation water hence over application has a direct financial cost to the farmer Irrigation often requires pumping energy either electricity or fossil fuel to deliver water to the field or supply the correct operating pressure Hence increased efficiency will reduce both the water cost and energy cost per unit of agricultural production A reduction of water use on one field may mean that the farmer is able to irrigate a larger area of land increasing total agricultural production Low efficiency usually means that excess water is lost through seepage or runoff both of which can result in loss of crop nutrients or pesticides with potential adverse impacts on the surrounding environment Improving the efficiency of irrigation is usually achieved in one of two ways either by improving the system design or by optimising the irrigation management Improving system design includes conversion from one form of irrigation to another e g from furrow to drip irrigation and also through small changes in the current system for example changing flowrates and operating pressures Irrigation management refers to the scheduling of irrigation events and decisions around how much water is applied Challenges EditEnvironmental impacts Edit Main article Environmental impact of irrigation Negative impacts frequently accompany extensive irrigation 31 Some projects which diverted surface water for irrigation dried up the water sources which led to a more extreme regional climate 32 Projects that relied on groundwater and pumped too much from underground aquifers created subsidence and salinization Salinization of irrigation water in turn damaged the crops and seeped into drinking water 32 Pests and pathogens also thrived in the irrigation canals or ponds full of still water which created regional outbreaks of diseases like malaria and schistosomiasis 33 34 35 Governments also used irrigation schemes to encourage migration especially of more desirable populations into an area 36 37 38 Additionally some of these large nationwide schemes failed to pay off at all costing more than any benefit gained from increased crop yields 39 40 Overdrafting depletion of underground aquifers In the mid 20th century the advent of diesel and electric motors led to systems that could pump groundwater out of major aquifers faster than drainage basins could refill them This can lead to permanent loss of aquifer capacity decreased water quality ground subsidence and other problems The future of food production in such areas as the North China Plain the Punjab region in India and Pakistan and the Great Plains of the US is threatened by this phenomenon 41 42 This section is an excerpt from Environmental effects of irrigation edit The environmental effects of irrigation relate to the changes in quantity and quality of soil and water as a result of irrigation and the subsequent effects on natural and social conditions in river basins and downstream of an irrigation scheme The effects stem from the altered hydrological conditions caused by the installation and operation of the irrigation scheme Amongst some of these problems is depletion of underground aquifers through overdrafting Soil can be over irrigated due to poor distribution uniformity or management wastes water chemicals and may lead to water pollution Over irrigation can cause deep drainage from rising water tables that can lead to problems of irrigation salinity requiring watertable control by some form of subsurface land drainage However if the soil is under irrigated it gives poor soil salinity control which leads to increased soil salinity with the consequent buildup of toxic salts on the soil surface in areas with high evaporation This requires either leaching to remove these salts and a method of drainage to carry the salts away Irrigation with saline or high sodium water may damage soil structure owing to the formation of alkaline soil Technical challenges Edit Overirrigation because of poor distribution uniformity in the furrows Potato plants were oppressed and turned yellow Irrigation schemes involve solving numerous engineering and economic problems while minimizing negative environmental consequences 31 Such problems include Ground subsidence e g New Orleans Louisiana Underirrigation or irrigation giving only just enough water for the plant e g in drip line irrigation gives poor soil salinity control which leads to increased soil salinity with consequent buildup of toxic salts on soil surface in areas with high evaporation This requires either leaching to remove these salts and a method of drainage to carry the salts away When using drip lines the leaching is best done regularly at certain intervals with only a slight excess of water so that the salt is flushed back under the plant s roots 43 Drainage front instability also known as viscous fingering where an unstable drainage front results in a pattern of fingers and viscous entrapped saturated zones Overirrigation because of poor distribution uniformity or management wastes water chemicals and may lead to water pollution 44 Deep drainage from over irrigation may result in rising water tables which in some instances will lead to problems of irrigation salinity requiring watertable control by some form of subsurface land drainage 45 46 Irrigation with saline or high sodium water may damage soil structure owing to the formation of alkaline soil Clogging of filters algae can clog filters drip installations and nozzles Chlorination algaecide UV and ultrasonic methods can be used for algae control in irrigation systems Complications in accurately measuring irrigation performance which changes over time and space using measures such as productivity efficiency equity and adequacy 47 Social aspects Edit Competition for surface water rights 48 Assisting smallholders in sustainably and collectively managing irrigation technology and changes in technology 49 History EditAncient history Edit Animal powered irrigation Upper Egypt ca 1846 Archaeological investigation has found evidence of irrigation in areas lacking sufficient natural rainfall to support crops for rainfed agriculture Some of the earliest known use of the technology dates to the 6th millennium BC in Khuzistan in the south west of present day Iran 50 51 The site of Choga Mami in Iraq on the border with Iran is believed to be the earliest to show the first canal irrigation in operation at about 6000 BCE 52 Irrigation was used as a means of manipulation of water in the alluvial plains of the Indus valley civilization the application of which is estimated to have begun around 4500 BC and drastically increased the size and prosperity of their agricultural settlements 53 The Indus Valley Civilization developed sophisticated irrigation and water storage systems including artificial reservoirs at Girnar dated to 3000 BCE and an early canal irrigation system from c 2600 BCE Large scale agriculture was practiced with an extensive network of canals used for the purpose of irrigation 53 54 Farmers in the Mesopotamian plain used irrigation from at least the third millennium BCE 55 They developed perennial irrigation regularly watering crops throughout the growing season by coaxing water through a matrix of small channels formed in the field 56 Ancient Egyptians practiced basin irrigation using the flooding of the Nile to inundate land plots which had been surrounded by dykes The flood water remained until the fertile sediment had settled before the engineers returned the surplus to the watercourse 57 There is evidence of the ancient Egyptian pharaoh Amenemhet III in the twelfth dynasty about 1800 BCE using the natural lake of the Faiyum Oasis as a reservoir to store surpluses of water for use during dry seasons The lake swelled annually from the flooding of the Nile 58 Young engineers restoring and developing the old Mughal irrigation system in 1847 during the reign of the Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah II in Indian subcontinent The Ancient Nubians developed a form of irrigation by using a waterwheel like device called a sakia Irrigation began in Nubia some time between the third and second millennia BCE 59 It largely depended upon the flood waters that would flow through the Nile River and other rivers in what is now the Sudan 60 In sub Saharan Africa irrigation reached the Niger River region cultures and civilizations by the first or second millennium BCE and was based on wet season flooding and water harvesting 61 62 Evidence of terrace irrigation occurs in pre Columbian America early Syria India and China 57 In the Zana Valley of the Andes Mountains in Peru archaeologists have found remains of three irrigation canals radiocarbon dated from the 4th millennium BCE the 3rd millennium BCE and the 9th century CE These canals provide the earliest record of irrigation in the New World Traces of a canal possibly dating from the 5th millennium BCE were found under the 4th millennium canal 63 Ancient Persia modern day Iran used irrigation as far back as the 6th millennium BCE to grow barley in areas with insufficient natural rainfall 64 50 The Qanats developed in ancient Persia about 800 BCE are among the oldest known irrigation methods still in use today They are now found in Asia the Middle East and North Africa The system comprises a network of vertical wells and gently sloping tunnels driven into the sides of cliffs and of steep hills to tap groundwater 65 The noria a water wheel with clay pots around the rim powered by the flow of the stream or by animals where the water source was still first came into use at about this time among Roman settlers in North Africa By 150 BCE the pots were fitted with valves to allow smoother filling as they were forced into the water 66 Sri Lanka Edit Main article Sri Lankan irrigation network The irrigation works of ancient Sri Lanka the earliest dating from about 300 BCE in the reign of King Pandukabhaya and under continuous development for the next thousand years were one of the most complex irrigation systems of the ancient world In addition to underground canals the Sinhalese were the first to build completely artificial reservoirs to store water citation needed These reservoirs and canal systems were used primarily to irrigate paddy fields which require a lot of water to cultivate Most of these irrigation systems still exist undamaged up to now in Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa because of the advanced and precise engineering The system was extensively restored and further extended by whom during the reign of King Parakrama Bahu 1153 1186 CE 67 China Edit Inside a karez tunnel at Turpan Xinjiang China The oldest known hydraulic engineers of China were Sunshu Ao 6th century BCE of the Spring and Autumn period and Ximen Bao 5th century BCE of the Warring States period both of whom worked on large irrigation projects In the Sichuan region belonging to the state of Qin of ancient China the Dujiangyan Irrigation System devised by the Qin Chinese hydrologist and irrigation engineer Li Bing was built in 256 BCE to irrigate a vast area of farmland that today still supplies water 68 By the 2nd century AD during the Han Dynasty the Chinese also used chain pumps which lifted water from a lower elevation to a higher one 69 These were powered by manual foot pedal hydraulic waterwheels or rotating mechanical wheels pulled by oxen 70 The water was used for public works providing water for urban residential quarters and palace gardens but mostly for irrigation of farmland canals and channels in the fields 71 Korea Edit Korea Jang Yeong sil a Korean engineer of the Joseon Dynasty under the active direction of the king Sejong the Great invented the world s first rain gauge uryanggye Korean 우량계 in 1441 It was installed in irrigation tanks by whom as part of a nationwide system to measure and collect rainfall for agricultural applications With this instrument planners and farmers could make better use of the information gathered in the which survey 72 North America Edit Main article Hohokam The earliest agricultural irrigation canal system known in the area of the present day United States dates to between 1200 B C and 800 B C and was discovered by Desert Archaeology Inc in Marana Arizona adjacent to Tucson in 2009 73 The irrigation canal system predates the Hohokam culture by two thousand years and belongs to an unidentified culture In North America the Hohokam were the only culture known to rely on irrigation canals to water their crops and their irrigation systems supported the largest population in the Southwest by AD 1300 The Hohokam constructed an assortment of simple canals combined with weirs in their various agricultural pursuits Between the 7th and 14th centuries they built and maintained extensive irrigation networks along the lower Salt and middle Gila Rivers that rivaled the complexity of those used in the ancient Near East Egypt and China These were constructed using relatively simple excavation tools without the benefit of advanced engineering technologies and achieved drops of a few feet per mile balancing erosion and siltation The Hohokam cultivated varieties of cotton tobacco maize beans and squash as well as harvesting an assortment of wild plants Late in the Hohokam Chronological Sequence they also used extensive dry farming systems primarily to grow agave for food and fiber Their reliance on agricultural strategies based on canal irrigation vital in their less than hospitable desert environment and arid climate provided the basis for the aggregation of rural populations into stable urban centers 74 need quotation to verify South America Edit See also Zana Valley The oldest known irrigation canals in the Americas are in the desert of northern Peru in the Zana valley near the hamlet of Nanchoc The canals have been radiocarbon dated to at least 3400 B C and possibly as old as 4700 B C The canals at that time irrigated crops such as peanuts squash manioc chenopods a relative of Quinoa and later maize 75 Modern history Edit In the 20th century global anxiety specifically about the American cotton monopoly fueled many empirical irrigation projects Britain began developing irrigation in India the Ottomans in Egypt the French in Algeria the Portuguese in Angola the Germans in Togo and Soviets in Central Asia 8 American West Edit Irrigated land in the United States increased from 300 000 acres in 1880 to 4 1 million in 1890 then to 7 3 million in 1900 40 Two thirds of this irrigation sources from groundwater or small ponds and reservoirs while the other one third comes from large dams 76 One of the main attractions of irrigation in the West was its increased dependability compared to rainfall watered agriculture in the East Proponents argued that farmers with a dependable water supply could more easily get loans from bankers interested in this more predictable farming model 77 Most irrigation in the Great Plains region derived from underground aquifers Euro American farmers who colonized the region in the 19th century tried to grow the commodity crops that they were used to like wheat corn and alfalfa but rainfall stifled their growing capacity Between the late 1800s and the 1930s farmers used wind powered pumps to draw groundwater These windpumps had limited power but the development of gas powered pumps in the mid 1930s pushed wells deep into the Ogallala Aquifer Farmers irrigated fields by laying pipes across the field with sprinklers at intervals a labor intensive process until the advent of the center pivot sprinkler after WWII which made irrigation significantly easier 78 By the 1970s farmers drained the aquifer ten times faster than it could recharge and by 1993 they had removed half of the accessible water 79 Large scale federal funding and intervention pushed through the majority of irrigation projects in the West especially in California Colorado Arizona and Nevada At first plans to increase irrigated farmland largely by giving land to farmers and asking them to find water failed across the board Congress passed the Desert Land Act in 1877 and the Carey Act in 1894 which only marginally increased irrigation 80 Only in 1902 Congress passed the National Reclamation Act which channeled money from the sale of western public lands in parcels up to 160 acres large into irrigation projects on public or private land in the arid West 81 The Congressmen who passed the law as well as their wealthy supporters supported Western irrigation because it would increase American exports reclaim the West and push the Eastern poor out West in search of a better life 82 While the National Reclamation Act was the most successful piece of federal irrigation legislation the implementation of the act did not go as planned Originally the Reclamation Service planned to construct a small number of projects that would allow engineers to learn from the process but President Roosevelt chose instead push as many irrigation projects through as fast as possible The Reclamation Service also chose to push most of the Act s money toward construction rather than settlement so the Service overwhelmingly prioritized building large dams like the Hoover Dam 83 Over the 20th century Congress and state governments grew more frustrated with the Reclamation Service and the irrigation schemes in general Frederick Newell head of the Reclamation Service proving uncompromising and difficult to work with falling crop prices resistance to delay debt payments and refusal to begin new projects until the completion of old ones all contributed 84 The Reclamation Extension Act of 1914 transferring a significant amount of irrigation decision making power regarding irrigation projects from the Reclamation Service to Congress was in many ways a result of an increasing political unpopularity of the Reclamation Service 85 In the lower Colorado Basin of Arizona Colorado and Nevada the states derive irrigation water largely from rivers especially the Colorado River which irrigates more than 4 5 million acres of land with a less significant amount coming from groundwater 86 In the 1952 case Arizona v California Arizona sued California for increased access to the Colorado under the grounds that their groundwater supply could not sustain their almost entirely irrigation based agricultural economy which they won 87 California which began irrigating in earnest in the 1870s in San Joaquin Valley 88 had passed the Wright Act of 1887 permitting agricultural communities to construct and operate needed irrigation works 89 The Colorado also irrigates large fields in California s Imperial Valley fed by the National Reclamation Act built All American Canal 90 91 Soviet Central Asia Edit When the Bolsheviks conquered Central Asia in 1917 the native Kazakhs Uzbeks and Turkmens used minimal irrigation The Slavic immigrants pushed into the area by the Tsarist government 92 brought their own irrigation methods including waterwheels the use of rice paddies to restore salted land and underground irrigation channels Russians dismissed these techniques as crude and inefficient Despite this in absence of other solutions tsarist officials maintained these systems through the late 19th century 93 Before conquering the area the Russian government accepted a 1911 American proposal to send hydraulic experts to Central Asia to investigate the potential for large scale irrigation A 1918 decree by Lenin then encouraged irrigation development in the region and development began in the 1930s When it did Stalin and other Soviet leaders prioritized large scale ambitious hydraulic projects especially along the Volga River The Soviet irrigation push stemmed largely from their late 19th century fears of the American cotton monopoly and subsequent desire to achieve cotton self sufficiency 94 They had built up their textile manufacturing industry in the 19th century requiring increased cotton and irrigation as the region did not receive enough rainfall to support cotton farming 93 The Russians built dams on the Don and Kuban Rivers for irrigation removing freshwater flow from the Sea of Azov and making it much saltier Depletion and salinization scourged other areas of the Russian irrigation project In the 1950s Soviet officials began also diverting the Syr Darya and the Amu Darya which fed the Aral Sea Before diversion the rivers delivered 55km3 of water to the Aral Sea per year but after they only delivered 6km3 to the Sea Because of its reduced inflow the Aral Sea covered less than half of its original seabed which made the regional climate more extreme and created airborne salinization lowering nearby crop yields 95 By 1975 the USSR used eight times as much water as they had in 1913 mostly for irrigation Russia s expansion of irrigation began to decrease in the late 1980s and irrigated hectares in Central Asia capped out at 7 million Mikhail Gorbachev killed a proposed plan to reverse the Ob and Yenisei for irrigation in 1986 and the breakup of the USSR in 1991 ended Russian investment in Central Asian cotton irrigation 96 Africa Edit Different irrigation schemes with a variety of goals and success rates have been implemented across Africa in the 20th century but have all been influenced by colonial forces The Tana River Irrigation Scheme in eastern Kenya completed between 1948 and 1963 opened up new lands for agriculture and the Kenyan government attempted to resettle the area with detainees from the Mau Mau uprising 97 Libya s underground water resources were discovered by Italian oil drillers during the Italian colonization of Libya This water lay dormant until 1969 when Muammar al Gaddafi and American Armand Hammer built the Great Man Made River to deliver the Saharan water to the coast The water largely contributed to irrigation but cost four to ten times more than the crops it produced were worth 98 In 1912 the Union of South Africa created an irrigation department and began investing in water storage infrastructure and irrigation The government used irrigation and dam building to further social goals like poverty relief both by creating construction jobs for poor whites and by creating irrigation schemes to increase white farming One of their first major irrigation projects was the Hartbeespoort Dam begun in 1916 as a mechanism to elevate the living conditions of the poor whites in the region and eventually completed as a whites only employment opportunity 99 The Pretoria irrigation scheme Kammanassie project and Buchuberg irrigation scheme on the Orange River all followed in the same vein in the 1920s and 30s 37 In Egypt modern irrigation began with Muhammad Ali Pasha in the mid 1800s who sought to achieve Egyptian independence from the Ottomans through increased trade with Europe specifically cotton exportation 100 His administration proposed replacing the traditional Nile basin irrigation which took advantage of the annual ebb and flow of the Nile with irrigation barrages in the lower Nile which better suited cotton production Egypt devoted 105 000 ha to cotton in 1861 which increased fivefold by 1865 The majority of their exports were shipped to England and the United States Civil War induced cotton scarcity in the 1860s cemented Egypt as England s cotton producer 101 As the Egyptian economy became more dependent on cotton in the 20th century it became more important to control even small Nile floods Cotton production was more at risk of destruction than more common crops like barley or wheat 102 After the British occupation of Egypt in 1882 the British intensified the conversion to perennial irrigation with the construction of the Delta Barrage the Assiut Barrage and the first Aswan Dam Perennial irrigation decreased local control over water and made traditional subsistence farming or the farming of other crops incredibly difficult eventually contributing to widespread peasant bankruptcy and the 1879 1882 Urabi revolt 103 Examples by country EditGallery Edit The hub of a center pivot irrigation system Leaks in micro irrigation drip lines Sprinkler irrigation of blueberries in Plainville New York United States Irrigation in Tamil Nadu India Irrigation ditch in Montour County Pennsylvania USA Water gardens in Sigiriya Sri Lanka Micro sprinklerSee also Edit Agriculture and Agronomy portalDeficit irrigation Gezira Scheme Irrigation management Irrigation statistics Leaf Sensor Lift irrigation scheme List of countries by irrigated land area Surface irrigation Tidal irrigation Water use in alluvial fans All pages with titles containing irrigationReferences Edit Snyder R L Melo Abreu J P 2005 Frost protection fundamentals practice and economics Vol 1 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations ISBN 978 92 5 105328 7 ISSN 1684 8241 Siebert S J Hoogeveen P Doll J M Faures S Feick and K Frenken November 10 2006 The Digital Global Map of Irrigation Areas Development and Validation of Map Version 4 PDF Tropentag 2006 Conference on International Agricultural Research for Development Bonn Germany Retrieved March 14 2007 a href Template Cite conference html title Template Cite conference cite conference a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The World The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency On Water European Investment Bank Retrieved December 7 2020 Water in Agriculture World Bank Retrieved December 7 2020 McNeill 2000 pp 180 181 McNeill 2000 pp 174 a b c Peterson 2016 McNeill 2000 pp 153 Ekbladh 2002 pp 337 Bosshard 2009 a b McNeill 2000 pp 169 170 a b Otoo Miriam Drechsel Pay 2018 Resource recovery from waste business models for energy nutrient and water reuse in low and middle income countries Oxon UK Routledge Earthscan a b WHO 2006 WHO Guidelines for the Safe Use of Wastewater Excreta and Greywater Volume IV Excreta and greywater use in agriculture World Health Organization WHO Geneva Switzerland Garcia Garcia Guillermo Jagtap Sandeep January 2021 Enhancement of a Spent Irrigation Water Recycling Process A Case Study in a Food Business Applied Sciences 11 21 10355 doi 10 3390 app112110355 ISSN 2076 3417 ISO 16075 1 2015 Guidelines for treated wastewater use for irrigation projects Part 1 The basis of a reuse project for irrigation ISO Ofori Solomon Puskacova Adela Ruzickova Iveta Wanner Jiri 2021 Treated wastewater reuse for irrigation Pros and cons Science of the Total Environment 760 144026 Bibcode 2021ScTEn 760n4026O doi 10 1016 j scitotenv 2020 144026 ISSN 0048 9697 PMID 33341618 S2CID 229341652 McDill Stuart November 27 2019 Startup helps Scottish farmers grow gourmet plants with sea water Reuters Thomson Reuters Retrieved December 2 2019 Seawater Solutions is helping farmers on Scotland s west coast adapt to the reality of less rain by choosing salt resistant plants and developing saltmarshes land flooded by tidal waters for them to grow in O Toole Emer July 29 2019 Seawater Solutions is tacking agriculture s impact on climate change The National Newsquest Media Group Ltd Retrieved December 2 2019 A system of farming that creates wetland ecosystems on which food can be grown while carbon is captured at a rate of up to 40 times higher than the same area of rainforest and profits are more than eight times more profitable than the average potato field Chartres C and Varma S Out of water From Abundance to Scarcity and How to Solve the World s Water Problems FT Press USA 2010 Flood Irrigation Service City of Tempe Arizona Retrieved July 29 2017 Frenken K 2005 Irrigation in Africa in figures AQUASTAT Survey 2005 Water Report 29 PDF Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations ISBN 978 92 5 105414 7 Archived from the original PDF on July 6 2017 Retrieved March 14 2007 Provenzano Giuseppe 2007 Using HYDRUS 2D Simulation Model to Evaluate Wetted Soil Volume in Subsurface Drip Irrigation Systems Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering 133 4 342 350 doi 10 1061 ASCE 0733 9437 2007 133 4 342 Mader Shelli May 25 2010 Center pivot irrigation revolutionizes agriculture The Fence Post Magazine Archived from the original on September 8 2016 Retrieved June 6 2012 Gaines Tharran January 7 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1992 pp 156 57 Pisani 2002 p 5 a b McNeill 2000 A new report says we re draining our aquifers faster than ever High Country News June 22 2013 Retrieved February 11 2014 Management of aquifer recharge and discharge processes and aquifer storage equilibrium PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 21 2018 Retrieved February 11 2014 EOS magazine September 2009 Hukkinen Janne Emery Roe and Gene I Rochlin A salt on the land A narrative analysis of the controversy over irrigation related salinity and toxicity in California s San Joaquin Valley Policy Sciences 23 4 1990 307 329 online Archived 2015 01 02 at the Wayback Machine Drainage Manual A Guide to Integrating Plant Soil and Water Relationships for Drainage of Irrigated Lands Interior Dept Bureau of Reclamation 1993 ISBN 978 0 16 061623 5 Free articles and software on drainage of waterlogged land and soil salinity control in irrigated land Retrieved July 28 2010 Lankford Bruce Closas Alvar Dalton James Lopez Gunn Elena Hess Tim Knox Jerry W Van Der Kooij Saskia Lautze Jonathan Molden David Orr Stuart Pittock Jamie Richter Brian Riddell Philip J Scott Christopher A Venot Jean Philippe Vos Jeroen Zwarteveen Margreet November 1 2020 A scale based framework to understand the promises pitfalls and paradoxes of irrigation efficiency to meet major water challenges Global Environmental Change 65 102182 doi 10 1016 j gloenvcha 2020 102182 ISSN 0959 3780 Rosegrant Mark W and Hans P Binswanger Markets in tradable water rights potential for efficiency gains in developing country water resource allocation World development 1994 22 11 pp 1613 1625 Venot Jean Philippe July 6 2017 Venot Jean Philippe Kuper Marcel Zwarteveen Margreet eds Drip Irrigation for Agriculture doi 10 4324 9781315537146 ISBN 9781315537146 a b Flannery Kent V 1969 Origins and ecological effects of early domestication in Iran and the Near East In Ucko Peter John Dimbleby G W eds The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals New Brunswick New 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Dillehay TD Eling HH Jr Rossen J 2005 Preceramic irrigation canals in the Peruvian Andes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102 47 17241 4 Bibcode 2005PNAS 10217241D doi 10 1073 pnas 0508583102 PMC 1288011 PMID 16284247 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The History of Technology Irrigation Encyclopaedia Britannica 1994 edition Qanat Irrigation Systems and Homegardens Iran Globally Important Agriculture Heritage Systems UN Food and Agriculture Organization Retrieved January 10 2007 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911 and 1989 editions de Silva Sena 1998 Reservoirs of Sri Lanka and their fisheries UN Food and Agriculture Organization Retrieved January 10 2007 China history Encyclopaedia Britannica 1994 edition Needham Joseph 1986 Science and Civilization in China Volume 4 Physics and Physical Technology Part 2 Mechanical Engineering Taipei Caves Books Ltd Pages 344 346 Needham Volume 4 Part 2 340 343 Needham Volume 4 Part 2 33 110 Baek Seok gi 백석기 1987 Jang Yeong sil 장영실 Woongjin Wiin Jeon gi 웅진위인전기 11 Woongjin Publishing Co Ltd Earliest Canals in America Archaeology Magazine Archive James M Bayman The Hohokam of Southwest North America Journal of World Prehistory 15 3 2001 257 311 Dillehay Tom D Eling Herbert H Jr Rossen Jack 2005 Preceramic irrigation canals in the Peruvian Andes PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America National Academy of Science 102 47 17241 17244 Bibcode 2005PNAS 10217241D doi 10 1073 pnas 0508583102 PMC 1288011 PMID 16284247 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved November 20 2020 McCully 2001 p 166 Worster 1992 pp 114 15 How Center Pivot Irrigation Brought the Dust Bowl Back to Life retrieved May 6 2022 McNeill 2000 pp 151 52 Worster 1992 pp 156 157 Worster 1992 p 161 Worster 1992 pp 166 67 Pisani 2002 p 30 Pisani 2002 p 152 Pisani 2002 Colorado River Basin Studies retrieved May 6 2022 August J L 2007 Dividing western waters Mark Wilmer and Arizona v California TCU Press Worster 1992 p 102 Worster 1992 p 108 McNeill 2000 p 178 Worster 1992 p 208 Morrison A Slavic peasant settlers in Russian Turkestan 1886 1917 retrieved May 6 2022 a b Peterson 2016 McNeill 2000 p 163 McNeill 2000 pp 164 5 McNeill 2000 p 166 Parker 2020 McNeill 2000 p 155 Clynick T 2007 A Search for Origins Science history and South Africa s Cradle of Humankind In Esterhuysen A Jenkins T Bonner P eds White South Africa s weak sons Poor whites and the Hartbeespoort Dam Wits University Press pp 248 274 ISBN 978 1 86814 669 7 Ross 2017 p 33 Ross 2017 p 32 McNeill 2000 p 167 Ross 2017 p 37 38 Sources Edit Bosshard Peter China Dams the World World Policy Journal 26 no 4 2009 43 51 Ekbladh David Mr TVA Grass Roots Development David Lilienthal and the Rise and Fall of the Tennessee Valley Authority as a Symbol for U S Overseas Development 1933 1973 Diplomatic History 29 no 3 Summer 2002 335 74 Johnson Matthew P Swampy Sugar Lands Irrigation Dams and the Rise and Fall of Malaria in Puerto Rico 1898 1962 Journal of Latin American Studies 51 no 2 May 2019 243 71 https doi org 10 1017 S0022216X18000743 Lyster Rosa Along the Water London Review of Books May 6 2021 https www lrb co uk the paper v43 n09 rosa lyster diary McCully Patrick Silenced Rivers The Ecology and Politics of Large Dams Enlarged amp Updated ed London New York Zed Books 2001 McNeill John Robert Something New under the Sun An Environmental History of the Twentieth Century World 1st ed New York W W Norton amp Company 2000 Parker James A Juggernaut of Progress Irrigation and Statecraft in Late Colonial Kenya International Journal of African Historical Studies 53 no 3 September 2020 335 59 Peterson Maya US to USSR American Experts Irrigation and Cotton in Soviet Central Asia 1929 32 Environmental History 21 no 3 July 2016 442 66 https doi org 10 1093 envhis emw006 Ross Corey Ecology and Power in the Age of Empire Europe and the Transformation of the Tropical World First edition Oxford Oxford University Press 2017 Pisani Donald J Water and American Government The Reclamation Bureau National Water Policy and the West 1902 1935 Berkeley University of California Press 2002 Visser Wessel Water as Agent for Social Change 1900 1939 Two Case Studies of Developmental State Approaches in Establishing Irrigation Schemes Historia 63 no 2 November 2018 40 61 https doi org 10 17159 2309 8392 2018 v63n2a3 Worster Donald Rivers of Empire Water Aridity and the Growth of the American West New York Oxford England Oxford University Press 1992 External links Edit Look up irrigation in Wiktionary the free dictionary International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage ICID Irrigation at the Water Quality Information Center U S Department of Agriculture AQUASTAT FAO s global information system on water and agriculture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irrigation amp oldid 1131478054, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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