Use of saline water for irrigation
Author
James D. RhoadesAuthor Affiliations
James D. Rhoades is Research Leader, Soil and Water Chemistry, U.S. Salinity Laboratory, and Adjunct Professor of Soil Science, Department of Soil and Environmental Sciences, University of California, Riverside.Publication Information
Hilgardia 38(10):42-43. DOI:10.3733/ca.v038n10p42. October 1984.
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Abstract
Not available – first paragraph follows:
Expansion of irrigated agriculture would contribute significantly toward meeting world food and fiber needs but, at the same time, would run headlong into competition for ever more limited water supplies. By reassessing the criteria for suitability of water (and land) for irrigation, however, available supplies can be expanded significantly. Very conservative standards have been used in the past. If these standards are relaxed, water generally classified as too saline for irrigation can often be used successfully without hazardous long-term consequences to crops or soils, even under conventional farming practices. Adoption of new crop and water management strategies would further facilitate the use of saline waters for irrigation and could make possible a sizable expansion of irrigated agriculture.
Also in this issue:
A vital resource in dangerHistorical perspective on salinity and drainage problems in California
The lower Colorado — a salty river
Status of soil salinity in California
Transport of salts by water
Effect of salt on soils
Case history: Salton Basin
Case history: San Joaquin Valley
Mechanisms of salt tolerance in plants
Crop tolerance
Metabolic energy cost for plant cells exposed to salinity
Effects of salinity stress on the development of Phytophthora root rots
Effects of salt on cell membranes of germinating seeds
Halophytes as a rangeland resource
Contrasting salinity responses of two halophytes
Salt tolerance of mesquite
Management alternatives: Crop, water, and soil
Benefits and limitations in breeding salt-tolerant crops
Reclamation and regeneration of boron in high-boron soils
Genetic engineering of salinity-tolerant plants
Salinity, photosynthesis, and leaf growth
Effects of increasing drainage in the San Joaquin Valley
Groundwater problems from a legal perspective
Economics of salinity management
Issues and options
Drainage by wells — an investigation in the Patterson Water District