People have used irrigation to provide water for crops almost as long as they have practiced agriculture. In the harsh, hot deserts of southern Arizona, the prehistoric Hohokam Indian communities dug extensive networks of irrigation canals to divert water from the nearby Salt River to their crops. Thus their society thrived where it would otherwise have perished. Aerial photography reveals the location of these ancient canals, which follow many of the same routes as today's concrete-lined waterways that carry water throughout the area of Phoenix, Arizona. In the Tigris and Euphrates valleys of Mesopotamia, which have been called the "cradle of civilization," crops were irrigated with similar results. It is possible that civilization declined there when the irrigated fields were "salted out" - made useless by the continuing addition of salts to the soil from poor-quality water. The Incas of ancient Peru also practiced irrigation extensively, including some innovative methods involving raised beds and provision of water from below.
Irrigation as practiced today in world agriculture is governed
by the same general principles as in ancient times. Water is
expensive and therefore must be used as efficiently as possible.
If surface water is used, dams, and waterways must be constructed
and maintained. If water is pumped from the ground, energy must
be expended to raise it to the surface. Perhaps surprisingly,
most of the inefficiency in the use of water is encountered before
the water ever reaches the plant in the field! Evaporation from
lakes, seepage from canals, transpiration from aquatic weeds that
grow in the canals, and uneven application in the fields are just
some of the problems faced by irrigation specialists. A system
is considered efficient if 50% of the water is delivered to the
root zone of the crop it is supporting.
Various methods have been developed for delivering water to fields.
If the land can be graded and sloped appropriately, furrows with
very slight downhill slope can be placed between rows of plants.
Water is applied at the uphill end and allowed to flow through
the furrows. Some water is wasted, because the soil at the uphill
end becomes saturated before enough has been delivered in the
middle of the field. Water may also "puddle" at the
downhill end. Level-basin irrigation is being used increasingly
to overcome these problems. Large basins are leveled to within
1 to 2 cm by laser-directed machinery. If the soil is uniformly
permeable throughout the basin, this allows water to be evenly
applied. If the land cannot be leveled or the amounts applied
are small, sprinklers are often used. However, sprinklers not
only require energy to pump and pressurize the water but also
produce small droplets from which evaporation is excessive. In
addition, if the water is of poor quality, sprinkling will deposits
salts directly on the leaves, where they can injure the plants.
In some cases, sprinkling at night can prevent much of the injury
because the salt-laden droplets do not evaporate as fast. Some
soils with very high clay content expand as they are wetted and
shrink and crack as they dry. When they are wet they tend to
become sealed, and water enters very slowly. For cracking clay
soils, a technique known as surge irrigation has been developed.
Water is put into the field extremely rapidly so that it can
flow down the cracks and enter the root zone before the soil swells
and the cracks disappear.
In recent years a technique known as drip irrigation (also called
trickle irrigation or microirrigation) has come into use in some
areas of the world. Water is pumped directly to the base of a
plant by plastic tubing and bled through an emitter at a slow
rate that just meets the plant's needs. This approach is very
efficient, but it is also very expensive and requires diligent
maintenance of the hardware to keep the system working. For
instance, the emitters tend to become plugged by both mineral
deposits and slime produced by microorganisms. Periodically,
the system must be flushed out with acid or with disinfectant.
So far, drip irrigation has been used mostly for high-valued
crops whose quality (and price) depends strongly on a reliable
supply of water. Under these conditions the profit from drip
irrigation will pay for the extra costs. Fresh fruits such as
blueberries and strawberries are extensively irrigated by this
method in the United States.
With the availability of extremely efficient irrigation systems such as drip irrigation, more attention can be shifted to inefficient use of water by the crops themselves and to possible improvements in plant water efficiency. The physiology of water in plants is an exciting area of research because many problems wait to be solved. For example, grain crops are most sensitive to drought when they are flowering, when abortion of the very young embryos can result in a barren plant. When problems such as this are solved, agronomists will know how to make grain yields reliable even without resorting to irrigation!