|
November / December, 2001
Water Table Management to
Enhance Water Quality and Farm Profit
By: H. W. Belcher
Michigan agricultural producers have many years experience
controlling their subsurface drainage to enhance crop production. Much
of the most productive crop land in Michigan has a naturally occurring
shallow water table and relatively flat topography. To be productive those
soils were artificially drained decades ago using underground pipes -
first clay and concrete and more recently corrugated plastic tubing.
 |
Figure
1. Drainage plow installing corrugated plastic tubing. |
In the Saginaw Bay area, where the water level in outlet
ditches is controlled by Lake Huron, drainage pumps are often required
to discharge the drainage water. A few innovative farmers tried turning
their pumps off after spring field work and then leaving them off through
much of the summer. They often observed increased crop yield along with
savings on their electric bill. A few of those farmers began experimenting
with using their pumps to add water to the subsurface drainage systems
during dry growing seasons. Pumping water into the drain pipes seemed
to further increase crop yield.
A good idea has a way of getting out. In the early 80's
Michigan producers began asking MSU agricultural engineers questions about
using subsurface drainage systems for both drainage and irrigation. Responding
to a growing interest, a multi-disciplinary team of engineers, soil scientists,
agronomists, crop modelers, economists, farmers and drainage contractors
was assembled and began planning applied research projects that would
provide answers to the questions being asked. The research that resulted
was designed to address the questions:
- does subirrigation
work;
- what are the conditions
for successful subirrigation;
- how should systems
be designed and installed that are used for both drainage and irrigation;
- how should those
systems be operated;
- what are the costs
and benefits associated with subirrigation; and
Research and Demonstration
The answers began coming from field scale research initiated in 1984.
That research started on a University owned production agriculture field
and was followed by research on farmer owned fields located near Bannister,
St. Johns and Unionville. Next came the 1986 Saginaw Bay Subirrigation
/ Drainage Project, a USDA project that funded 26 studies directly addressing
questions concerning the economic, environmental, engineering and sociological
opportunities and challenges associated with water table management expansion
within five Saginaw Bay Counties - Bay, Huron, Saginaw, Sanilac and Tuscola.
The Saginaw Bay work led to a 10 year project (starting in 1991)on a privately
owned field near Saginaw. The Saginaw site allowed replicated, multi-disciplinary
data collection and included facilities to limit rain on intensively instrumented
plots and to observe growing roots. How does subirrigation effect the
edge of field surface and subsurface water quality?
 |
Figure 2. Rain controlled intensive
plots at Saginaw site. |
Research Highlights
- Water Quality
-
At Bannister, for 20 months of monitoring beginning in 1987,
the total dissolved nitrate-N delivered from the Bannister field
to the outlet ditch by the subsurface drainage system was reduced
64% by subirrigating.
-
At Unionville, for two growing season, water table management
by subirrigation reduced dissolved nitrate-N leaving the field
by 58% and dissolved orthophosphate-phosphorus by 16% compared
to conventional subsurface drainage. The total drainage volume,
surface and subsurface, was 17% greater for subirrigation than
for conventional subsurface drainage. However, subirrigation increased
the volume of surface drainage by only 7%.
- Yield/Economics
- Side-by-side comparison of subirrigated to conventional subsurface
drained crop yields during 1985 through 1995 showed:
-
The average of 24 yield observations made at numerous locations
in the south half of the lower peninsula was 173 bu/ac. Eight
subirrigated soybean yield observations averaged 53 bu/ac and
five subirrigated sugar beet observations averaged 22 t/ac.
-
Comparison yields measured from adjacent subsurface drained fields
without subirrigation averaged 138 bu/ac for 16 corn yield observations,
37 bu/ac for two soybean yield observations and 22 t/ac for five
sugar beet yield observations.
-
The yield results suggest that for field crops, at present market
value, subirrigation provides a positive return on investment
until the capital cost of subirrigation improvement exceeds about
$600/ac more than the cost of a conventional subsurface drainage
system; and
-
The cost of water table management by subirrigation is less than
other irrigation methods both in terms of capital cost and operation
cost for cropland that requires subsurface drainage.
 |
Figure 3. Water table depth control
structure during subirrigation |
In General
- For a substantial
percentage of Michigan cropland, water table management by subirrigation
is feasible and often provides both water quality and economic benefit
- Water table management
systems must be properly designed and operated to achieve potential
benefits. Poorly designed and/or operated water table management systems
waste water and energy, increase discharge of nutrients and pesticides,
and reduce yields.
- Michigan farmers
with subsurface drainage systems that need to be upgraded should consider
modifying those systems to allow water table management by subirrigation.
For more information
Contact Dr. Belcher at (517) 353-5270, email: belcher@egr.msu.edu.
Printable PDF file
Agricultural Engineering
Michigan State University
A.W. Farrall Hall
East Lansing, MI 48824-1323
(517) 355-4720
Questions or comments contact: webmaster
Past
Newsletters | Agricultural
Engineering Home | Michigan State
University Home
December 4, 2001 |
|