Producer Perceptions on the Value and Availability of Water for Irrigation in the Mississippi Delta

Author:

Kaur Gurpreet1,Ashwell Nicolas E. Quintana2,Singh Gurbir1,Gholson Drew2,Locke Martin A.3,Krutz L.J.4,Cooke Trey5

Affiliation:

1. Northern Missouri Research, Extension, and Education Center University of Missouri, Novelty Missouri USA

2. National Center for Alluvial Aquifer Research Mississippi State University, Stoneville Mississippi USA

3. National Sedimentation Laboratory USDA Agricultural Research Service, Oxford Mississippi USA

4. Water Resources Research Institute Mississippi State University, Mississippi State Mississippi USA

5. Mississippi River Basin Program The Nature Conservancy, Cleveland Mississippi USA

Abstract

AbstractThe agricultural production in the Mississippi Delta is threatened by the water level declines in the Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer (MRVAA). This study assesses the growers’ perceptions of the value and availability of water for irrigation based on data collected in a survey in 2012 in the Delta region of Mississippi, USA. The total cooperation rate for this survey was 79.3%. The results showed that 97.39% (448 out of 460) of respondents believed that water is important for farming in the Delta region of the MRVAA. Fifty‐two percent of the survey respondents agreed that the major cause of groundwater depletion is agricultural irrigation water use. More than 50% of the survey respondents believed there is sufficient water in the Delta region, but it is not managed properly. The value of water for irrigation ranged from $463 to $690 per ha for corn (Zea mays L.), $399 to $615 per ha for soybean (Glycine max L.), and $223 to $336 per ha for cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.). The majority of the respondents considered that there is a need for regulation of water use to protect the aquifer and ensure water availability in the future.

Funder

Agricultural Research Service

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

Reference17 articles.

1. Irrigation Water Management Practices that Reduce Water Requirements for Mid-South Furrow-Irrigated Soybean

2. Irrigation Methods and Scheduling in the Delta Region of Mississippi: Current Status and Strategies to Improve Irrigation Efficiency

3. Establishing irrigation thresholds for furrowirrigated peanuts;Leininger S.D.;Crop, Forage & Turfgrass Management,2019

4. Virtual groundwater transfers from overexploited aquifers in the United States

5. Massey J.2010.Water‐conserving Irrigation Systems for Furrow and Flood Irrigated Crops in the Mississippi Delta. Final Report. Available at:https://www.wrri.msstate.edu/pdf/massey_final.pdf. Accessed July 17 2023.

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