Impact of Rising Groundwater on Sustainable Irrigated Agriculture in the Command Area of Gadeji Minor, Sindh, Pakistan

  • Ghulam Shabir Solangi Department of Civil Engineering, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Campus, Khairpur Mir’s.
  • Abdul Latif Qureshi US-Pakistan Centres for Advanced Studies in Water, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro.
  • Masroor Ali Jatoi Department of Civil Engineering, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro

Abstract

A study has been conducted in the command area of Gadeji minor, Sindh, Pakistan to compute the amount of net groundwater recharge and its effect on sustainable irrigated agriculture. In this connection, Water budget equation was used and three groundwater recharging components along with one discharging component were computed for both Rabi and Kharif crop seasons for the period (2001-2013). Data shows that groundwater is rising at rapid rate during the Kharif season. The percolation rate through cropped fields is the major recharge component; accounting for 81% in the total mean recharge of 8.42 million m3, moreover the rice area is the major contributor to net groundwater recharge during Kharif season. The contributions of canal seepage and rainfall are estimated to be 16 and 04% respectively for the above period. However, during the Rabi season groundwater is rising at low rate where canal seepage is the major recharging component with an average contribution of 48% in the total mean recharge of 2.32 million m3, the contribution of deep percolation from cropped fields is estimated to be 47% as compared to the rainfall of only 05%. Survey shows non-functionality of most of the tubewells, groundwater withdrawal is not sufficient to fully offset groundwater recharge which has increased water table and caused waterlogging and soil salinity in more than 40% of agricultural land. To overcome this rising water table problem, it is recommended: to change existing cropping pattern (i.e. minimize or no cultivation of rice crop), lining of minor and all its watercourses, adopt salt tolerant crops and increase groundwater withdrawals by operating tubewells on emergency basis.

Published
Jan 1, 2017
How to Cite
SOLANGI, Ghulam Shabir; QURESHI, Abdul Latif; JATOI, Masroor Ali. Impact of Rising Groundwater on Sustainable Irrigated Agriculture in the Command Area of Gadeji Minor, Sindh, Pakistan. Mehran University Research Journal of Engineering and Technology, [S.l.], v. 36, n. 1, p. 159-166, jan. 2017. ISSN 2413-7219. Available at: <https://publications.muet.edu.pk/index.php/muetrj/article/view/350>. Date accessed: 05 dec. 2024. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.22581/muet1982.1701.15.
This is an open Access Article published by Mehran University of Engineering and Technolgy, Jamshoro under CCBY 4.0 International License