Managing Soil Salinity in the Lower Reaches of the Amudarya Delta: How to Break the Vicious Circle
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Citation
Akmal Akramkhanov, Mirzakhayot Ibrakhimov, Johannes Lamers. (29/11/2010). Managing Soil Salinity in the Lower Reaches of the Amudarya Delta: How to Break the Vicious Circle, in "Food Policy for Developing Countries: Case Studies". New York City, United States of America: Cornell University Press.
Abstract
This case study focuses on the vicious circle of soil
salinization: agriculture’s consumption of large
amounts of water contributes to shallow groundwater,
leading to recurring soil salinity, which in
turn demands more water for leaching (flushing the
salts out of the rooting zone). The situation is
exacerbated when water is not available in sufficient
amounts in time and in space. The seemingly stable
present water flows in the major water source (the
Amudarya River) since the major drought in
2000–01 is caused by increased glacier melting in
upstream countries. This water supply in turn
diverts attention from the strong need for
improved irrigation and cropping practices. Efforts
aimed at reducing the amounts of irrigation water
use face the problem of the “devilish” vicious circle,
which has not only technical but also financial and
political dimensions
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Author(s) ORCID(s)
Akramkhanov, Akmal https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4316-5580