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Hydrologic Impacts due to Changes in Conveyance and Conversion from Flood to Sprinkler Irrigation Practices
Authors:Brian J Venn  Drew W Johnson  Larry O Pochop
Affiliation:1Engineer Intern, Leonard Rice Engineers, Inc., 2000 Clay St., Ste. 300, Denver, CO?80211-5119.
2Assistant Professor, Dept. of Civil and Architectural Engineering, Univ. of Wyoming, P.O. Box 3295, University Station, Laramie, WY?82071.
3Professor, Dept. of Civil and Architectural Engineering, Univ. of Wyoming, P.O. Box 3295, University Station, Laramie, WY?82071.
Abstract:Improvements in irrigation efficiency are well documented when changing from flood to sprinkler irrigation methods; however, other impacts to the watershed associated with this change are not well known. The resulting impacts to a river basin hydrology when irrigation and conveyance methods are changed are the focus of this study. In an attempt to improve water application and conveyance efficiencies in the Salt River Basin of western Wyoming, irrigation practices were changed from flood irrigation to sprinkler irrigation beginning in the late 1960s, with completion by the mid-1970s. Based upon a water balance, flow in the Salt River increased an average of 65.62 MCM/year. Return flow timing was also impacted by the conversion to sprinkler irrigation. Flows increased 34% in May and 50% in June, while decreasing 15 and 14% in August and September. These changes may have coincided with decreases in groundwater storage. However, analysis of changes in groundwater levels with time was inconclusive. Surface water total dissolved solids (TDS) appears unaffected by the conversion in irrigation practices, while limited groundwater quality data indicate that TDS values are lower in sprinkler irrigated areas.
Keywords:Flood irrigation  Sprinkler irrigation  Conveyance structures  Return flow  
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