State-of-the-art water management system gives MSU researchers tools for new regional agricultural solutions
Contact: Vanessa Beeson
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擜 new water management system installed at 幺力视频鈥檚 R.R. Foil Plant Science Research Center is elevating the university鈥檚 research capabilities as scientists develop solutions for farmers in Mississippi and across the Midsouth.
Advanced Drainage Systems, a leading manufacturer in drainage and irrigation, selected MSU as a Midsouth research site for the state-of-the-art water management system, which the company recently installed in a 10-acre field at the center, commonly referred to as North Farm. The system allows for field drainage and subsurface irrigation through a process known as pattern drain tile.
Darrin Dodds, professor and head of MSU鈥檚 Department of Plant and Soil Sciences in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, said the installation will allow scientists in the university鈥檚 Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station to enhance research solutions for growers in the region.聽
鈥淲hile a few growers have adopted pattern drain tile in parts of east Mississippi, a system of this nature is very new to our state.聽We are uniquely positioned to evaluate not only the efficacy of drainage through this system but also study how it impacts aboveground and subsurface irrigation and water quality,鈥 Dodds explained.
In 2021, the team will plant cotton in the field and evaluate drainage with subsurface irrigation, drainage with furrow irrigation and drainage alone across three trials.
鈥淭o the best of our knowledge, 幺力视频 will be the only university in the southern U.S. that has a system such as this coupled with irrigation capabilities and the potential to monitor the effect of agricultural practices on water quality,鈥 Dodds added
Jason Krutz, director of the Mississippi Water Resources Research Institute and plant and soil sciences professor, said he hopes the partnership will demonstrate a tool that saves producers money and improves water use efficiency.
鈥淭he project has the potential to alleviate two of the most critical limiting factors in the Midsouth鈥攄rainage and supplemental irrigation,鈥 said Krutz, who noted the latter could help farmers in the Mississippi Delta, in particular, where one of the most intensively irrigated agricultural regions in the nation draws more than 90 percent of its irrigation water from the Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer.
While pattern drain tile gets its name from previous drainage systems that used cylindrical clay tiles, modern drain tile鈥攊ncluding the MSU installation鈥攗ses corrugated plastic piping.
Darla Huff, Advanced Drainage Systems鈥 market manager for North America, said she hopes the research at MSU will establish a return on investment for Midsouth producers interested in installing the system.
鈥淲e know this system can increase yields of up to 30 percent across the Corn Belt and in the Upper Midwest, where much of 56 million acres of pattern drain tile in the U.S. is installed,鈥 Huff said. 鈥淗owever, as someone who grew up in Louisiana and graduated from 幺力视频, I know agriculture in the South is completely different. Producers here need research and data from fields with similar soils and conditions as their own.鈥
Huff said she hopes the research conducted on the new system will provide just that.
鈥淲e understand the challenges farmers face when it comes to water management including drainage and irrigation. Adequate drainage allows farmers to get in the field sooner, pushing the planting window earlier in the spring. But there are questions, for example, of how much earlier can farmers plant? How much can a farmer save in irrigation costs? How does it impact water quality? These are questions we hope to answer through our partnership with 幺力视频,鈥 Huff said.聽聽聽
For more information on MSU鈥檚 Department of Plant and Soil Sciences in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, visit .
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