MSU Pushes RISER Plan For Efficient Crop Irrigation
STONEVILLE, MISS.
Mississippi State University experts have a
new program to help Delta producers irrigate
row crops more efficiently and economically.
MSU Extension Service irrigation specialist
Jason Krutz is leading a multi-faceted approach
to water conservation, dubbed Row-crop Irrigation
Science and Extension
Research, or
RISER. The researchers
are working
with producers to
help reduce irrigation
water use while
maintaining or improving
crop yields
and profitability.
“The RISER plan
developed by MSU
can help producers
better manage irrigation
and increase
production and profitability,”
Krutz said.
Growers participating
in RISER allow
MSU researchers to
handle irrigation decisions
on a particular
field for the entire
growing season. At
the end of the year,
the grower can compare
irrigation costs
and harvest yields on
the RISER fields with
those on other fields
on the farm.
“We’ll talk to the producers all year, telling
them when we’re going to irrigate and what
we’re doing,” Krutz said. “We hope at the end of
the year when they see how much they saved on
irrigation and what their yields were like, they’ll
follow these practices on their other fields and
tell their neighbors they need to do what MSU is
recommending.”
MSU researchers will schedule irrigations for
fields in the RISER program using scientific irrigation
scheduling tools, including the Mississippi
Irrigation Scheduling Tool, or MIST;
atmometers; and soil moisture sensors.
Research has proven the effectiveness of these
scheduling tools in Nebraska and Florida, and
MSU researchers will collect data this year to
validate these numbers in Mississippi.
“Use of a scientific irrigation scheduling tool
can reduce irrigation usage by 30 or 40 percent,”
Krutz said.
The final step in the RISER management program
involves using the computerized program
Pipe Hole and Universal Crown Evaluation Tool,
or PHAUCET, to calculate the proper hole size
and distribution for polypipe to furrow irrigate
row crops efficiently.
Tom Eubank, agronomic crops specialist with
MSU’s Extension Service and researcher with
the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment
Station at the Delta Research and Extension
Center, has evaluated PHAUCET over
the last three years. This project is funded by a
grant from the Mississippi Soybean Promotion
Board.
“Our research has shown that PHAUCET reduces
water, fuel and irrigation usage by 20
percent versus conventional irrigation sets in
regular-shaped fields,” Eubank said.
In irregular-shaped fields, PHAUCET could reduce
water use as much as 50 percent.
Through the RISER program, MSU scientists
will work with corn, cotton, soybean and rice
Extension specialists using existing on-farm
management systems, such as the Smart Program
for soybeans and the Corn Verification
Program, to promote good irrigation management
practices.
“If soybean producers could eliminate one irrigation
during the growing season, it could decrease
the overdraft of the Mississippi Alluvial
Aquifer by approximately 300,000 acre feet a
year,” Krutz said. “That is the equivalent of
300,000 side-by-side football fields covered in
one foot of water.”
This aquifer has served as an irrigation source
for the Mississippi Delta for decades. Experts
have estimated that it is decreasing by 300,000
acre feet a year.
“Using 25 percent less aquifer water for irrigation
would slow this depletion,” Krutz said.
Krutz said even producers not participating in
RISER can take steps to reduce water consumption.
A key step in fine-tuning irrigation
strategies to conserve this critical natural is to
keep irrigation records for fields. The written
records should include the timing and amounts
of water used. Krutz offers large, laminated
ledger sheets provided by the Mississippi Soybean
Promotion Board to aid this process.
“Increased management and awareness are
key steps in irrigation management. This initial
step is crucial to better management because
less than 1 percent of the area’s producers keep
irrigation records,” Krutz said.
For more information on implementing smart
irrigation strategies, contact Krutz at (662) 686-
3271 or Eubank at (662) 686-3232. Δ
Mississippi State University experts are working with producers to implement programs that help
reduce irrigation costs andmaintain or improve yields in a variety of crops, including soybeans like these.
Photo by MSU Delta Research and Extension Center/File Photo