Salt dynamics and budgeting in the root zone of wheat under irrigated saline environment

Salt dynamics and budgeting in the root zone of wheat

Authors

  • PARMANAND KUMAR Climate Change and Forest Influence DivisionForest Research Institute (ICFRE), Dehradun- 248006
  • A SARANGI WTC, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-12, India
  • DK SINGH WTC, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-12, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21921/jas.v9i03.11007

Keywords:

Root zone salt dynamics, salt deposition, production functions, leaching

Abstract

Plant growth is adversely affected by salt deposition in the root zone and requires judicious irrigation water management for enhancing productivity in an irrigated saline environment. To study the salt deposition and subsequent leaching of salts below the root zone of wheat, an experiment with four wheat cultivars (viz. three salt-tolerant KRL-210 (V 1 ), KRL-1-4 (V 2 ), and one salt non-tolerant HD- 2894 (V 4 ) were taken for the experiment under artificially prepared irrigation water with salinity levels of 4 dS m -1 (S 2 ), 8 dS m -1 (S 3 ) and 12 dS m -1 (S 4 ) besides the varying salinity of the groundwater from 1.45 to 1.7 dS m -1 (S 1 ) during rabi seasons of 2009-10 and 2010-11 at the research farm of Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), New Delhi, India. The soil salinity (EC 1:2 ) was 0.2 dS m -1 before the conduction of the experiment during rabi 2009-10 and varied from 0.26 to 0.95 dS m -1 during rabi 2010-11. The total salt-induced in soil was 70.15 t ha -1 and 55.6 t ha -1 for rabi 2009-10 and 2010-11 respectively by saline irrigation water. The salt deposition in the crop root zone was observed at maximum (i.e., 17.04 and 22.97 t ha -1 during rabi 2009-10 and 2010-11, respectively) for S 4 treated plots and minimum in S 1 treatment levels. The production functions for wheat varieties were developed and the coefficient of determination (R 2 ) was 0.98 to 0.99 and 0.94 for salt-tolerant and salt non-tolerant varieties, respectively. Moreover, it was also estimated that the maximum salt was deposited on the top soil layer (15cm) and the leaching of salts from S 1 , S 2 , S 3, and S 4 treatments levels was 65%, 63%, 52%, and 48% salts, respectively from the root zone. However, this study would assist in the computation of leaching requirements for enhancing productivity in irrigated saline environments.

Author Biographies

PARMANAND KUMAR, Climate Change and Forest Influence DivisionForest Research Institute (ICFRE), Dehradun- 248006

Climate Change and Forest Influence Division

Scintist-B (Hydrology)

A SARANGI , WTC, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-12, India

Principal Scientist, WTC, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-12, India

DK SINGH, WTC, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-12, India

Principal Scientist and Professor, Division of Agricultural Engineering, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-12, India

References

Ayars JE, Hutmacher RB, Schoneman RA, Vail SS, and Pflaum T.1993. Long term use of saline

water for irrigation. Irrigation Science 14: 27-34

Bakker DM, Hamilton GJ, Hetherington R and Spann C. 2010. Salinity dynamics and the potential for improvement of waterlogged and saline land in a Mediterranean climate using permanent raised beds. Soil & Tillage Research 110 (1):8-24.

Chhabra R. 1996. Soil salinity and water quality. A.A. Balkema publishers, VT, USA. 284 pp.

Cullu MAC, Aydemir S, Qadir M, Almaca A, Ozturkmen AR, Bilgic A and Agca N. 2010. Implication of groundwater fluctuation on the seasonal salt dynamic in the Harran plain, South-Eastern Turkey. Irrigation and Drainage 59: 465–476

Dutta KK, Sharma VP and Sharma DP.1998. Estimation of a production function for wheat under saline conditions. Agricultural Water Management 36: 85–94.

Gupta RK and Abrol IP. 2000. Salinity build up and changes in the rice wheat system of the Indo Gangetic Plain. Experimental Agriculture 36(02): 273-284

Hoffman GJ, Rawlins SL, Oster JD, Jobes JA and Merrill SD. 1979. Leaching requirement for

salinity control I. Wheat, sorghum, and lettuce. Agricultural Water Management 2(2): 177-

Li H, Yi J, Zhang J, Zhao Y, Si B, Hill R L, Cui L and Liu X. 2015. Modeling of soil water and salt dynamics and its effects on root water uptake in Heihe arid wetland, Gansu, China. Water

:2382-2401.

Liua A, Qua Z and Nachshonb U. 2020. On the potential impact of root system size and density on salt distribution in the root zone. Agricultural Water Management 234: 106118

Manchanda HR, Karwasra SPS and Sharma HC. 1993. Salinity research at HAU. In: Manchanda, H. R., Karwasra, S. P. S., Sharma, H. C. (Eds.), CSC Haryana Agricultural University, 109 pp.

Minhas P S.1996. Saline water management for irrigation in India. Agricultural Water Management 30: 1-24.

Minhas PS and Gupta RK.1992. Conjunctive use of saline and non-saline waters. III Validation and applications of a transient model for wheat. Agricultural Water Management 23: 149–160.

Oster JD. 1994. Irrigation with poor quality water. Agricultural Water Management. 25: 271–297.

Pitman M and Lauchli A. 2002. Global impacts of salinity and agricultural ecosystems. In: Lauchli, A., Luttge, U. (Eds.), Salinity: Environment–Plants–Molecules. Kluwer Academics, 3–20.

Qadir M, Ghafoor A and Murtaza G. 2000. Amelioration strategies for saline soils. Land Degradation and Development 11: 501–521.

Rhoades JD, Nahid A, Manteghi PJ, Shouse PJ and Alves WJ. 1989. Estimating soil salinity from

saturated soil paste electrical conductivity. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 53(4), 28-33.

Rhoades JD.1982. Soluble Salts. In: A.L. Page (ed.) Methods of soil analysis, Part 2 Chemical and microbiological properties, 2nd edition. Agronomy 9:149-157.

Sharma BR and Minhas PS. 2005. Strategies for managing saline/alkali waters for sustainable

agricultural production in South Asia. Agricultural Water Management 78: 136 –151.

Sharma DP and Rao KVGK.1998. Strategy for long term use of saline drainage water for irrigation in semi-arid regions. Soil and Tillage Research 48: 287-295.

Singh RB; Chauhan CPS; Minhas PS. 2009. Water production functions of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) irrigated with saline and alkali waters using double-line source sprinkler system.

Agricultural Water Management 96:736–744.

Soothar RK, Zhang W, Liu B, Tankari M, Wang C, Li L, Xing H, Gong D, and Wang Y. 2019.

Sustaining yield of winter wheat under alternate irrigation using saline water at different

growth stages: A case study in the North China Plain. Sustainability 11:45-64.

Sun G, Zhu Y, Ye M, Yang J, Qu Z, Mao W and Wu J. 2019. Development and application of long-

term root zone salt balance model for predicting soil salinity in arid shallow water table area.

Agricultural Water Management 213: 486–498.

Van Hoorn JW. 1981. Salt movement, leaching efficiency and leaching requirement. Agricultural Water Management 4(4): 409-428.

Verma AK, Gupta SK and Isaac RK. 2010. Long-term Use of Saline Drainage Waters for Irrigation in Subsurface Drained Lands: Simulation Modelling with SWAP. Journal of Agricultural Engineering 47 (3): 15-23.

Wallender W, Tanji K, Gilley JR, Hill RW, Lord JM, Moore CV, Robinson R and Stegman EC. 2006.

Water Flow and Salt Transport in Cracking Clay Soils of the Imperial Valley, California.

Irrigation and Drainage Systems 20(4): 361-387.

Wang Q, Huo Z, Zhang L, Wang J and Zhao Y. 2016. Impact of saline water irrigation on water use efficiency and soil salt accumulation for spring maize in arid regions of China. Agricultural

Water Management 163:125–138.

Yang-Ren W, Shao-Zhongli K, Fu-Sheng L, Lu Z and Jian-Hua Z. 2007. Saline Water Irrigation

Scheduling Through a Crop-Water-Salinity Production Function and a Soil-Water-Salinity

Dynamic Model. Pedosphere 17(3): 303-317.

Downloads

Published

2023-03-31