4.6 Article

Analysis of saline groundwater infiltration into two loam soils

Journal

LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 29, Issue 10, Pages 3795-3802

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ldr.3089

Keywords

desalination; one-dimensional infiltration; saline groundwater irrigation; salt distribution; salt movement; water content

Funding

  1. Coastal Resources and Environmental Team for Blue-yellow Area
  2. Project of the Cultivation Plan of Superior Discipline Talent Teams of Universities in the Shandong Province
  3. Autonomous Innovation Project of Jiangsu Agriculture Science Technology [CX(15)1005]
  4. Ludong University [LY2015013]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41771256, 41501309]
  6. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFC0400202]

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Irrigation with saline groundwater may cause salt accumulation in the soil and even land degradation in coastal areas. The aim of this study was to reveal how the changes in groundwater salinity affect the infiltration characteristics under controlled conditions. One-dimensional vertical infiltration experiments were conducted in uniform columns of silty clay-loam and sandy-loam under different salinity levels of irrigation groundwater (0, 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, and 12gL(-1) NaCl). The results showed that as groundwater salinity increased, the infiltration capacity of the silty clay-loam increased under low salinity levels but decreased under higher salinity levels, with a turning point at the salinity of 6gL(-1) NaCl. However, there were no significant differences in the infiltration capacity of the sandy-loam under salinity levels of 1-9gL(-1) NaCl, whereas a significant increase was found under 12gL(-1) NaCl. The infiltration capacity of the sandy-loam was consistently higher compared with the silty clay-loam under different salinity levels. Under short-term irrigation with a conventional amount of 750-900m(3)ha(-1), extracting groundwater with the salinity of <6gL(-1) NaCl obtained higher desalination efficiency in the silty clay-loam and resulted in less salt accumulation in the surface soil (0-20cm). Under the same amount of irrigation with groundwater containing 1-12gL(-1) NaCl, the increase of soil salt content was relatively small in the sandy-loam and might not significantly affect crop growth.

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