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Soil salinity in a drip and furrow irrigated cotton field under influence of different deficit irrigation techniques

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dc.contributor.author Kaman, Harun
dc.contributor.author Çetin, Mahmut
dc.contributor.author Kirda, Cevat
dc.date.accessioned 2016-03-21T09:09:30Z
dc.date.available 2016-03-21T09:09:30Z
dc.date.issued 2008
dc.identifier.citation Kaman, H., Çetin, M., Kirda, C. (2008). Soil salinity in a drip and furrow irrigated cotton field under influence of different deficit irrigation techniques, International Meeting on Soil Fertility Land Management and Agroclimatology, Special Issue, 235-243. tr_TR
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11607/2651
dc.description.abstract We investigated the influence of conventional deficit irrigation (CDI) and partial root zone irrigation (PRI) on soil salinity in a drip- and furrow-irrigated cotton field. Under PRI, one half of the rooting zone is wetted while the other half is maintained partially dry, and thus reduced amount of water is applied. The wetted half of the root zone is alternately changed either every or every other subsequent irrigations. Effects of time length during which one side of the root zone stays wet or partially dry on soil salinity were investigated for only furrow irrigated cotton. We had compared proportional soil salinity developed under CDI and PRI under drip irrigation. Thus we had two field experiments consisting separately drip- and furrow-irrigated cotton. The treatments under furrow irrigated cotton were (1) FULL, control treatment where rooting zone soil water content was increased to field capacity at each irrigation; (2) 1PRI and (3) 2PRI, 50% deficit irrigation compared to FULL treatment was applied while interchanging wetted and partially dry sides every and every other irrigations, respectively. The drip-irrigated cotton had similarly three treatments: (1) FULL, the control treatment where full amount of irrigation water (100% Class-A pan evaporation) was applied to both sides of the plant rows; (2) 1PRI and (3) CDI, where the both treatments had 50% deficit irrigation compared to FULL treatment. Under CDI treatment, the deficit amount of water was uniformly applied to both sides of the cotton rows. Soil salinity was assessed utilizing root zone soil salinity profiles developed at planting and following harvest. Additionally we had isosalinity maps constructed with grid soil sampling of plant root zone at harvest. The results showed that soil salinity increase was significant (P<0.05) only within soil surface layer of 0-20 cm. The highest increase in soil salinity was noted under the treatment of 2PRI with furrow irrigation. The drip irrigated cotton data showed that the salinity increase under PRI was in the same range as the FULL treatment whereas the increase under CDI was the highest. However, any likely soil salinity increase, resulting from deficit irrigation either with CDI or PRI practices, was at levels which could easily be leached with winter rains. tr_TR
dc.language.iso eng tr_TR
dc.publisher Adnan Menderes Üniversitesi Ziraat Fakültesi Dergisi tr_TR
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess tr_TR
dc.subject Water Use Efficiency tr_TR
dc.subject Salinity Profile tr_TR
dc.subject Water Quality tr_TR
dc.subject Salinity Map tr_TR
dc.subject Cotton tr_TR
dc.subject PRI tr_TR
dc.title Soil salinity in a drip and furrow irrigated cotton field under influence of different deficit irrigation techniques tr_TR
dc.type article tr_TR
dc.relation.journal International Meeting on Soil Fertility Land Management and Agroclimatology tr_TR
dc.contributor.authorID TR127568 tr_TR
dc.contributor.authorID TR1150 tr_TR
dc.contributor.department Akdeniz University, Faculty of Agriculture, Dept. of Agricultural Structures and Irrigation tr_TR
dc.identifier.issue Special Issue tr_TR
dc.identifier.startpage 235 tr_TR
dc.identifier.endpage 243 tr_TR


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