Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/120803
Title: Effect of Irrigation Management and Water Quality on Soil and Sorghum bicolor Payenne Yield in Cape Verde
Authors: Palacios-Díaz, María del Pino 
Fernández-Vera, Juan Ramón 
Hernández Moreno, José Manuel 
Amorós, Regla
Mendoza-Grimón, Vanessa 
UNESCO Clasification: 330810 Tecnología de aguas residuales
330806 Regeneración del agua
310205 Riego
Keywords: Forage
Reclaimed water
Soil
Subsurface drip irrigation
Sustainability, et al
Issue Date: 2023
Project: Adaptación al cambio climático en la Macaronesia a través de la reutilización y uso eficiente del agua 
Mitigación del cambio climático a través de la innovación en el ciclo del agua mediante tecnologías bajas en carbono 
Proyecto Puente Ref CEI2020-02
Journal: Agriculture (Switzerland) 
Abstract: Treated water use for agriculture will promote sustainable irrigation development and food sovereignty. The aim of this study is to assess the feasibility of subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) compared to drip irrigation (DI) and of reclaimed water (RW) versus conventional groundwater (CW), to produce forage sustainably in a warm arid region. A sorghum experiment was conducted in a field on Santiago Island (Cape Verde). A forage yield of 200 t fresh matter·ha−1·year−1, irrigated by RW, was obtained. Considering Cape Verde regulations, it is possible to irrigate sorghum using a drip system and RW without adding fertilizers. Soil fertility (OM and Ntot) increased, while risk parameters (EC, nitrate, and Na) returned to their initial values after the rainy season. The best irrigation water use efficiency was obtained by RWSDI (200 L·kg−1 DM) compared to RWDI, which needed 34% more water. According to the results, a high nitrate elimination rate in treatment plants might not be desirable if agricultural reuse is planned to irrigate high-N-demanding species. Establishing new salinity tolerance levels under reuse conditions with SDI, and irrigating in rainy months to promote the lixiviation of salts in arid regions are also necessary.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/120803
ISSN: 2077-0472
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture13010192
Source: Agriculture (Switzerland) [ISSN 2077-0472], v. 13 (1), 192, (Enero 2023)
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