Even though annual rainfall is high in the Delta region of Mississippi, only 30 % occurs during the months in which the major crops are produced, making irrigation often necessary to meet crop water needs and to avoid risk of yield and profitability loss. Approximately, 65 % of the farmland in this region is irrigated. The shallow Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer is the major source of water for irrigation and for aquaculture in the predominant catfish industry. This groundwater is being heavily used as row-crop irrigation has increased tremendously. Water level in this aqui-fer has declined significantly over the past twenty five years, with overdraft of approximately 370 million cubic meters of water per year. Moreover, the commo...
Small farms are particularly important for local food production in the Mississippi Delta, a region ...
Further efforts are needed to combat poverty and agricultural productivity problems in the delta reg...
Proceedings of the 2011 Georgia Water Resources Conference, April 11, 12, and 13, 2011, Athens, Geor...
Ninety-eight percent of water taken from the Mississippi River Shallow Alluvial Aquifer, hereafter r...
This thesis aims to provide a sustainable irrigation alternative that could be easily adopted by far...
This article describes the opinions and perceptions of farmers on water management tools that conser...
The Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer (MRVAA) is declining precipitously due to irrigation w...
Concerns about groundwater depletion from conventional irrigation agriculture in the Arkansas Delta ...
There are about 15 million acres of cropland in the U.S. that are irrigated from aquifers which are ...
Crop production on the Southern High Plains of Texas relies on groundwater drawn from the Ogallala A...
Reducing groundwater withdrawals from the Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer is imperative to...
Food and agriculture are the largest consumers of water, requiring one hundred times more than we us...
Conflict over water use in the southeastern US is increasingly common as communities and industries ...
17.6 million acres, or 73 percent, of the Mississippi Delta Region is currently cropland and possess...
Water level declines in the Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer (MRVAA) are attributed largely...
Small farms are particularly important for local food production in the Mississippi Delta, a region ...
Further efforts are needed to combat poverty and agricultural productivity problems in the delta reg...
Proceedings of the 2011 Georgia Water Resources Conference, April 11, 12, and 13, 2011, Athens, Geor...
Ninety-eight percent of water taken from the Mississippi River Shallow Alluvial Aquifer, hereafter r...
This thesis aims to provide a sustainable irrigation alternative that could be easily adopted by far...
This article describes the opinions and perceptions of farmers on water management tools that conser...
The Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer (MRVAA) is declining precipitously due to irrigation w...
Concerns about groundwater depletion from conventional irrigation agriculture in the Arkansas Delta ...
There are about 15 million acres of cropland in the U.S. that are irrigated from aquifers which are ...
Crop production on the Southern High Plains of Texas relies on groundwater drawn from the Ogallala A...
Reducing groundwater withdrawals from the Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer is imperative to...
Food and agriculture are the largest consumers of water, requiring one hundred times more than we us...
Conflict over water use in the southeastern US is increasingly common as communities and industries ...
17.6 million acres, or 73 percent, of the Mississippi Delta Region is currently cropland and possess...
Water level declines in the Mississippi River Valley Alluvial Aquifer (MRVAA) are attributed largely...
Small farms are particularly important for local food production in the Mississippi Delta, a region ...
Further efforts are needed to combat poverty and agricultural productivity problems in the delta reg...
Proceedings of the 2011 Georgia Water Resources Conference, April 11, 12, and 13, 2011, Athens, Geor...