ABSTRACT

Modern Land Drainage 2nd edition is a fully revised and updated edition of the 2004 edition. Modern Land Drainage describes traditional drainage formulas (Hooghoudt, Kirkham, Donnan, Ernst, Glover-Dumm) for rainfed agriculture in the humid temperature zone. Significant parts are devoted to drainage for salinity control of irrigated land in (semi-) arid zones, and to drainage of rice land in the humid tropics. Institutional, management and maintenance aspects are extensively covered, as well as the mitigation of adverse impacts of drainage interventions on the environment. The latest computer applications for drainage design in the context of integrated water management are described (DRAINMOD, HEC, SWAP, etc.). Field surveys are executed by governments, with the aid of consultants, but rarely are the end stakeholders (i.e., farmers and general public) involved from inception to planning to execution of a drainage system. Yet, during the Operation, Management and Maintenance (OMM) phase of a water management system, they are expected to takeover, run, bear and be responsible for the costs of OMM. The book describes successful methodologies and processes to be followed for engagement of stakeholders at all levels, from government to farm, from minister to farmer, and, from beginning to end. The book covers all aspects needed for sustainable drainage. The latest survey methodologies with satellites and drones are suggested to assess cause and effect. Waterlogging and salinity are the effect of something caused most likely upstream of the drainage problem location. Hence treating the cause may be more cost-effective. Triple Bottom Line (social, environmental and financial considerations) and the water-food-energy nexus are an integral part of the drainage design process. Controlled drainage, i.e. the balance of removal and conservation of drainage water and minimising solute transport as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA principle) is extensively described. This work is intended for use both as a university level textbook and as a professional handbook; it is of particular value to professionals engaged in drainage development in the context of integrated water resources and river basin management, civil and agricultural engineers, government officials, university students and libraries.

part I|56 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|28 pages

Land drainage for agriculture

chapter Chapter 2|9 pages

Planning and design considerations

chapter Chapter 3|7 pages

Remote sensing and field reconnaissance

chapter Chapter 4|8 pages

Assessment of costs

part II|59 pages

Investigations

chapter Chapter 5|23 pages

Climate, land, soil and environment

chapter Chapter 6|13 pages

Water in the soil

chapter Chapter 7|19 pages

Hydraulic conductivity

part III|76 pages

Systems and technology

chapter Chapter 8|42 pages

Subsurface drainage systems

chapter Chapter 9|18 pages

Surface/shallow drainage systems

chapter Chapter 10|14 pages

Main drainage systems

part IV|97 pages

Design

chapter Chapter 11|31 pages

Design of pipe drainage systems

chapter Chapter 12|33 pages

Design discharges

chapter Chapter 13|29 pages

Design of drainage canals, pumps and structures

part V|64 pages

Salinity control

chapter Chapter 14|26 pages

Soil salinity

chapter Chapter 15|15 pages

Irrigation induced salinisation

chapter Chapter 16|20 pages

Drainage of irrigated land

part VI|61 pages

Special topics

chapter Chapter 17|12 pages

Seepage and interception

chapter Chapter 18|12 pages

Reclamation and drainage of unripened soils

chapter Chapter 19|9 pages

Drainage of rice lands

chapter Chapter 20|14 pages

Controlled drainage

chapter Chapter 21|11 pages

Computer applications

part VII|40 pages

Management and New Developments

chapter Chapter 22|5 pages

Research and innovation

chapter Chapter 24|13 pages

Maintenance

chapter Chapter 25|8 pages

Performance assessment and benchmarking