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Sub-irrigation with brackish water for vegetable production in arid regions

R. M. Patel, S. O. Prasher, D. Donnelly, R. B. Bonnell and R. S. Broughton
a Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, McGill University, MacDonald Campus, Box 950/21, 111 Lakeshore Rd., Ste-Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 3V9
b Department of Plant Science, McGill University, Macdonald Campus, Ste-Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 3V9

Received 5 January 1998; revised 20 November 1998; accepted 30 January 1999. Available online 12 October 1999.


 

Abstract

Brackish water is the principal source of irrigation water in many arid regions. Surface irrigation with brackish waters is limited to salt tolerant crops or is used alternately with scarce freshwater resources. However, subirrigation may help overcome some of the limitations associated with the use of brackish water in arid agricultural regions. Use of this technique to produce potatoes (Solanum tuberosum L.), one of the world's major food crops, is investigated in this study. The yield and tuber grade of `Atlantic' and `Russet Burbank' potatoes were evaluated in field lysimeters packed with a sandy soil, salinized to 3.5 dS/m, and then subirrigated with water having salinity levels (ECi) of 1, 5 or 9 dS/m, beginning 13 days after planting. Preventing rainwater entry by using plastic mulch simulated arid conditions. Water tables were maintained at 40 or 80 cm below the soil surface. At harvest, soil solution salinity (ECw) in the lysimeters ranged from 3.5 to 7.6 dS/m. Water table depths or subirrigation water salinity levels had no significant effect on the total tuber weight of either cultivar. However, yield of grade A Russet Burbank tubers was greater when the water table was maintained at 40 cm. This trend was similar but not significant for Atlantic tubers. Productivity of Atlantic was lower than that of Russet Burbank. Subirrigation with brackish water in the saline soil resulted in yield that was 59% above the global average, thus demonstrating its utility for agriculture in dry regions.

 

 

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