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Resumen de Evaluating salinity distribution in soil irrigated with saline water in arid regions of northwest China

Weiping Chen, Zhenan Hou, Laosheng Wu, Yongchao Liang, Changzhou Wei

  • In arid and semi-arid regions, salinity is a serious and chronic problem for agriculture. A 3-year field experiment in the arid environment of Xinjiang, northwest China, was conducted to study the salinity change in soil resulting from deficit irrigation of cotton with non-saline, moderate saline and high saline water. The salinity profile distribution was also evaluated by an integrated water, salinity, and nitrogen model, ENVIRO-GRO. The simulated and observed salinity distributions matched well. Results indicated that after 3 years of cotton production, the average salinity in the 1.0-m soil profile was 336% and 547% of the original soil profile, respectively, for moderate saline and high saline water irrigation. If the practices continued, the average soil salinity (ECe) in the 1.0-m soil profile would approach a steady level of 1.7, 10.8, and 14.7 dS m-1, respectively, for the treatments receiving irrigation waters of 0.33, 3.62, and 6.71 dS m-1. It was concluded that deficit irrigation of saline water in this region was not sustainable. Model simulation showed that a big flood irrigation after harvest can significantly reduce the salt accumulation in the soil profile, and that this practice was much more efficient for salinity control than applying the same extra amount of water during the growing season


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