Water logging refers to saturation of soil with water such that oxygen levels decrease. It occurs when water from rainfall or irrigation raises the water table and saturates the root zone. This leads to reduced crop growth. Water logging also causes salinity as salts accumulate in the saturated soil. Various methods can be used to control water logging, including raised bed farming, drainage systems, optimizing irrigation techniques like drip irrigation, and crop rotation.
Water logging refers to saturation of soil with water such that oxygen levels decrease. It occurs when water from rainfall or irrigation raises the water table and saturates the root zone. This leads to reduced crop growth. Water logging also causes salinity as salts accumulate in the saturated soil. Various methods can be used to control water logging, including raised bed farming, drainage systems, optimizing irrigation techniques like drip irrigation, and crop rotation.
Water logging refers to saturation of soil with water such that oxygen levels decrease. It occurs when water from rainfall or irrigation raises the water table and saturates the root zone. This leads to reduced crop growth. Water logging also causes salinity as salts accumulate in the saturated soil. Various methods can be used to control water logging, including raised bed farming, drainage systems, optimizing irrigation techniques like drip irrigation, and crop rotation.
Water logging refers to saturation of soil with water such that oxygen levels decrease. It occurs when water from rainfall or irrigation raises the water table and saturates the root zone. This leads to reduced crop growth. Water logging also causes salinity as salts accumulate in the saturated soil. Various methods can be used to control water logging, including raised bed farming, drainage systems, optimizing irrigation techniques like drip irrigation, and crop rotation.
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WATER LOGGING
WATER LOGGING AND SALINITY
Water logging refers to the saturation of soil with water.
Soil may be regarded as waterlogged when it is nearly
saturated with water much of the time such that its air phase is restricted and anaerobic conditions prevail.
Accumulation of salts in a root zone of the soil. Adversely
affects the plant growth. How Water logging affects Cultivation??
Productivity of land gets affected when root zone of the
plants flooded with water. Decrease the oxygen level for the survival of bacteria Normal cultivation cannot be carried over wet soil Free water may rise above the surface of land and those land known as Swampy land. Water loving plants such as weed , grass etc grow profusely in water logged lands and thus affecting the growth of crops. Water logging also leads to Salinity...
Plant root happen to come within the capillary fringe
Due to continuous upward flow of water, the salts present in water rise towards the surface – results in deposition. Salinity makes the soil saline Whenever there is water logging, salinity is must. Salinity in the Murray-Darling Basin TYPES OF WATER LOGGING 1. Water logging due to permanent submersion of land such as pond river etc. 2. Water logging due to periodical submersion such as coastal and estuarine land inundation by soil water and runoff of fresh water over lands etc. 3. Temporary water logging by stagnation of water as a result of heavy rainfall. 4. Water logging by coming out of water table to the surface & swampy areas in valleys are mostly caused by the phenomenon. 5. Water logging by artificial irrigation of agricultural lands in polder areas. CAUSES OF WATER LOGGING OVER AND INTENSIVE IRRIGATION
• When a policy of intensive irrigation is
adopted, then, the maximum irrigable area of a small region is irrigated. This leads to too much of irrigation in that region, resulting in heavy percolation and subsequent rise of water table. SEEPAGE OF WATER FROM THE ADJOINING HIGH LANDS
• Water from the adjoining high lands may seep
into the sub-soil of the affected land and may
rise to water table.
SEEPAGE OF WATER THROUGH THE CANALS • Water may seep through the beds and sides of the adjoining canals, reservoirs etc situated at the a higher level than the affected land resulting in high water table. IMPERVIOUS OBSTRUCTION • Water seeping below the soil moves horizontally but may find an impervious obstruction, causing the rise of water table on the upstream side of the obstruction. INADEQUATE NATURAL DRAINAGE • Soils having less permeability below the top layers of pervious soils, will not be able to drain the water deep into the ground. INADEQUATE SURFACE DRAINAGE
• Storm water falling over the land and the
excess irrigation water should be removed and should not be allowed to percolate below. If proper drainage is not provided, the water will constantly percolate and will raise the level of the underground reservoir. EXCESSIVE RAINS • Waterlogging occurs when the soil profile or the root zone of a plant becomes saturated. • In rain-fed situations, this happens when more rain falls than the soil can absorb or the atmosphere can evaporate.
• The amount of ‘excess rain’ is particularly
large in the higher rainfall areas of the south- west. • Waterlogging occurs when roots cannot respire due to excess water in the soil profile. • Improving drainage from the inundated paddock can decrease the period at which the crop roots are subjected to anaerobic conditions. • While raised beds are the most intensive management strategy, they are also the most effective at improving drainage. • Waterlogged soils release increased amounts of nitrous oxide (N2O), a particularly damaging greenhouse gas. SUBMERGENCE DUE TO FLOOD • submergence due to frequent flooding can adversely affect plant growth and yield. • Plants may become completely submerged for short periods if flooding is severe. • Elongation ability of leaves and internodes are essential to keep pace with increasing water levels and escape complete submergence. • Flooding can occur anywhere where water can be backed up. • stems have nodes, which break when there is tremendous pressure due to strong rainfall . • Cloudiness lessens the process of food- producing photosynthesis. Less sunlight makes rice plant to weaken and lodge. • Some pests also attack rice crops grown in flooded fields, such as the yellow stemborer and the ufra nematode. FLAT TOPOGRAPHY • Flooding method consists in applying the water by flooding the land of rather smooth and flat topography. In free flooding method water is applied to the land from field ditches without any check or guidance to the flow. WATERLOGGING CONTROL CROP ROTATION METHOD • Growing the same crop in the same place for many years in a row (monocropping) disproportionately depletes the soil of certain nutrients • With rotation, a crop that leaches the soil of one kind of nutrient is followed during the next growing season by a dissimilar crop that returns that nutrient to the soil or draws a different ratio of nutrients. • In addition, crop rotation mitigates the buildup of pathogens and pests that often occurs when one species is continuously cropped, and can also improve soil structure and fertility by increasing biomass from varied root structures. OPTIMUM USE OF WATER
Drip irrigation is a type
of micro irrigation system that has the potential to save water as well as it prevents from wastage of water and waterlogging • Raised bed farming Raised bed farming refers to the agricultural technique of building freestanding crop beds above the existing level of soil.So that excess water moves down • Proper drainage By construction proper drainage the water which is excess and which cause waterlogging is drained. • Control the loss of water due to seepage from the canals
Canal lining is the
process of reducing seepage loss of irrigation water by adding an impermeable layer to the edges of the trench. • Introducing intercepting drainage Intercepting drainage(Curtain drain) is a drainage system that is installed to collect, channel and remove surface and subsurface water within permeable soil as it flows across an impermeable soil layer. THANK YOU SUBMITTED BY :- ABINAYA K - CB.EN.U4CIE17004 KARTHIKEYAN R - CB.EN.U4CIE17029 KIRAN RAJ - CB.EN.U4CIE17031 VARSHINI P - CB.EN.U4CIE17056