Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia

Smallholder irrigation to improve food security in the dry season as well as economic and demographic growth within Ethiopia is developing rapidly. However, the long term sustainability of increased irrigated production, together with degradation of soils (and associated water bodies) may be irrepar...

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Autores principales: Schmitter, Petra S., Haileslassie, Amare, Dessalegn, Yigsaw, Chali, A., Tilahun, S., Langan, Simon J., Barron, Jennie
Formato: Conference Paper Abstract
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Water Management Institute 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76999
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author Schmitter, Petra S.
Haileslassie, Amare
Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Chali, A.
Tilahun, S.
Langan, Simon J.
Barron, Jennie
author_browse Barron, Jennie
Chali, A.
Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Haileslassie, Amare
Langan, Simon J.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Tilahun, S.
author_facet Schmitter, Petra S.
Haileslassie, Amare
Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Chali, A.
Tilahun, S.
Langan, Simon J.
Barron, Jennie
author_sort Schmitter, Petra S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Smallholder irrigation to improve food security in the dry season as well as economic and demographic growth within Ethiopia is developing rapidly. However, the long term sustainability of increased irrigated production, together with degradation of soils (and associated water bodies) may be irreparably damaged by inappropriate watering schedules. In irrigation schemes, over-irrigation results in periodic water scarcity issues and in some cases sodicity. The aim of the study was to evaluate whether using wetting front detectors (WFD), a simple mechanical irrigation advice tool, would give farmers the right knowledge on when and how much to irrigate. Therefore, improving sustainable on-farm water management without negatively affecting crop and water productivity while fostering a more equitable water distribution within the scheme. The study, conducted in different regions of Ethiopia, covered various agro-ecological zones and soil conditions with over 200 farmers irrigating cereals or vegetables. Farmers and water user associations were trained on using the WFD to irrigate and distribute water within the scheme. Irrigation and crop performance was evaluated against control plots, having the same crop variety and management but traditional irrigation practices. Reduction in applied irrigation volume due to the WFD differed within and between sites due to furrow length, soil texture and farmer experience. Although yield increases were highly variable between farmers due to differences in farm management and crop variety cultivated, there was a positive effect of WFD on water productivity. Water productivity on average increased by 9 % whereas yields for the different crops increased between 13 and 17 %. In some cases the volume of water saved could double the cropped area. The reduction of irrigation events, when using the WFD, led to labour saving (up to 11 working days per ha) and fuel saving (between 50 and 150 US$ per ha). In both sites, farmers positively evaluated the scheduling tool, acknowledging that they learned to save water without negatively impacting crop productivity. The study showed that by providing access to when and how much to irrigate, farmers can positively adjust their on-farm water management resulting in more sustainable usage of their natural resources.
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spelling CGSpace769992025-11-07T08:37:37Z Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia Schmitter, Petra S. Haileslassie, Amare Dessalegn, Yigsaw Chali, A. Tilahun, S. Langan, Simon J. Barron, Jennie irrigation water Smallholder irrigation to improve food security in the dry season as well as economic and demographic growth within Ethiopia is developing rapidly. However, the long term sustainability of increased irrigated production, together with degradation of soils (and associated water bodies) may be irreparably damaged by inappropriate watering schedules. In irrigation schemes, over-irrigation results in periodic water scarcity issues and in some cases sodicity. The aim of the study was to evaluate whether using wetting front detectors (WFD), a simple mechanical irrigation advice tool, would give farmers the right knowledge on when and how much to irrigate. Therefore, improving sustainable on-farm water management without negatively affecting crop and water productivity while fostering a more equitable water distribution within the scheme. The study, conducted in different regions of Ethiopia, covered various agro-ecological zones and soil conditions with over 200 farmers irrigating cereals or vegetables. Farmers and water user associations were trained on using the WFD to irrigate and distribute water within the scheme. Irrigation and crop performance was evaluated against control plots, having the same crop variety and management but traditional irrigation practices. Reduction in applied irrigation volume due to the WFD differed within and between sites due to furrow length, soil texture and farmer experience. Although yield increases were highly variable between farmers due to differences in farm management and crop variety cultivated, there was a positive effect of WFD on water productivity. Water productivity on average increased by 9 % whereas yields for the different crops increased between 13 and 17 %. In some cases the volume of water saved could double the cropped area. The reduction of irrigation events, when using the WFD, led to labour saving (up to 11 working days per ha) and fuel saving (between 50 and 150 US$ per ha). In both sites, farmers positively evaluated the scheduling tool, acknowledging that they learned to save water without negatively impacting crop productivity. The study showed that by providing access to when and how much to irrigate, farmers can positively adjust their on-farm water management resulting in more sustainable usage of their natural resources. 2016 2016-09-09T12:54:33Z 2016-09-09T12:54:33Z Conference Paper Abstract https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76999 en Limited Access application/pdf International Water Management Institute Schmitter, P., Haileslassie, A., Desalegn, Y., Chali, A., Tilahun, S., Langan, S. and Barron, J.2016. Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia. Paper presented at the Tropentag 2016 Conference on Solidarity in a Competing World—Fair Use of Resources, Vienna, Austria, 19–21 September 2016. Colombo, Sri Lanka, IWMI.
spellingShingle irrigation
water
Schmitter, Petra S.
Haileslassie, Amare
Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Chali, A.
Tilahun, S.
Langan, Simon J.
Barron, Jennie
Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia
title Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia
title_full Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia
title_short Improving on-farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in Ethiopia
title_sort improving on farm water management by introducing wetting front detectors to small scale irrigators in ethiopia
topic irrigation
water
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/76999
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