PPI TR-42-2002 Agriculture and Drainage Inseparable Science《农业和灌溉 不可分割的科学》.pdf
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1、 - 1- TR-42 Agriculture and Drainage “Inseparable Science” Research Summary 2002 105 Decker Court, Suite 825, Irving, TX 75062 P: 469-499-1044 F: 469-499-1063 www.plasticpipe.org - 2- Foreword This report was developed and published with the technical help and financial support of the members of the
2、 PPI (Plastics Pipe Institute). The members have shown their interest in quality products by assisting independent standards-making and user organizations in the development of standards, and also by developing reports on an industry-wide basis to help engineers, code officials, specifying groups, a
3、nd users. The purpose of this technical report is to provide important information available to PPI on the importance of drainage for the agriculture industry. This report has been prepared by PPI as a service of the industry. The information in this report is offered in good faith and believed to b
4、e accurate at the time of its preparation, but is offered without any warranty, expressed or implied, including WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Any reference to or testing of a particular proprietary product should not be construed as an endorsement by PPI, which
5、does not endorse the proprietary products or processes of any manufacturer. The information in this report is offered for consideration by industry members in fulfilling their own compliance responsibilities. PPI assumes no responsibility for compliance with applicable laws and regulations. PPI inte
6、nds to revise this report from time to time, in response to comments and suggestions from users of the report. Please send suggestions of improvements to the address below. Information on other publications can be obtained by contacting PPI directly or visiting the web site. The Plastics Pipe Instit
7、ute (469) 499-1044 http:/www.plasticpipe.org Originally published July 2002 Reviewed and Reaffirmed March 2008 - 3- Agriculture and Drainage Inseparable Science Introduction US agriculture is an important contributor to the worlds food supply and a major component of the US economy. Nearly one-fifth
8、 of the worlds agricultural exports are shipped from the US. We have a heritage of productive agricultural lands and favorable climate that provides us with a comparative advantage. (Bucks, 1992) All agricultural soils require drainage. Natural drainage processes are not sufficient for agricultural
9、production on about 25% of the cropland in the USA and Canada. Artificial or improved drainage is necessary to produce crops on these lands. Improved drainage is needed on over 50 % of the cropland in some states and provinces. (Skaggs and Breve, 1991) Current agricultural production would be very d
10、ifficult to sustain if not for the drainage technology that has been developed over the past decades. Agricultural drainage continues to play a vital role in the sustainability of the worlds food and fiber production. Drainage technology development and research has been a cooperative effort between
11、 universities and public and private sponsoring organizations. The purpose of this white paper is to summarize many of the issues relating to agriculture, drainage and water quality and much of the research that has been performed. This information will be used to formulate a platform to support the
12、 on-going drainage activities and direct future developments and research. - 4- History of Drainage It has been said that those who ignore lessons from history are doomed to repeat them. This section is a brief compilation of historical documentation that drainage has not always been for agricultura
13、l production alone. In many instances, drainage served the purpose of making lands productive and even habitable. Historically, water management for agricultural purposes can be traced to Mesopotamia some 9,000 years ago. A major reason for the decline and disappearance of some ancient civilizations
14、 based on irrigation was their failure to heed the need for drainage. Drainage, the practice of removing excess water from agricultural land, has its origin at least 2,500 years ago when Herodotus wrote about drainage works near the city of Memphis in Egypt. Marcus Porcius Cato, 234 to 149 BC, appar
15、ently wrote the first specific directions for draining land. Land drainage is also apparent in the records of the Greek, Egyptian, and Roman civilizations. Land drainage to re-claim areas adjoining the North Sea in England began in the tenth century. The Dutch began converting land by draining and d
16、iking around 1550. Russia inaugurated drainage works in 1710 to make St. Petersburg habitable. (Economic Research Service, 1987), (Donnan) Much of the United States was not habitable or capable of agricultural production in its pre-development condition. Much of East central Illinois, for example, w
17、as“swampy land considered worthless for farming. Problems of human health were frequently reported such as epidemics of malaria, cholera, milk sickness, ague, and fever. Plagues of mosquitoes and flies were also reported. It is easy to understand the account of the young man who refused to trade his
18、 horse and saddle for a full section (640 acres) of swampy land in that period.“ (Economic Research Service, 1987) A 640-acre tract would sell for more than three million dollars at the highest agricultural land prices in that same area within the last several years. Pickels (1925) noted that Govern
19、ment Land Office records show that one-fourth of Illinois and still larger portions of other states were swampland. Twenty-one counties in northwestern Ohio and northeastern Indiana included much low land originally too wet to cultivate. Much of the land in north central Iowa, at the time of settlem
20、ent, was in shallow sloughs too wet for normal cultivation. Large areas in western Minnesota, northeastern Arkansas, the gulf plains of Texas, and the delta areas of Mississippi and Louisiana were originally swamp and overflow areas. Drainage permitted cultivation of these areas. (Economic Research
21、Service, 1987) The report on Longs expedition to the source of the St. Peters River in 1823 stated, “Near to this house we passed the state line which divides Ohio from IndianaThe distance from this to Fort Wayne is 24 miles, without a settlement; the country is so wet that we scarcely saw an acre o
22、f land upon which a - 5- settlement could be made. We traveled for a couple of miles with our horses wading through water, sometimes to the girth. Having found a small patch of esculent-grass (which from its color is know here by the name of bluegrass), we attempted to stop and pasture our horses, b
23、ut this we found impossible on account of the immense swarms of mosquitoes and horse flies. From Chicago to the place where we forded the Des Plaines, the country presents a low, flat and swampy prairie, very thickly covered with high grass, aquatic plants, and among others, the wild rice.” (Economi
24、c Research Service, 1987) The first known colony-wide drainage law was enacted in New Jersey in 1772. A City of New Orleans drainage outlet was constructed around 1794. Patterns for molding the first subsurface drains in the United States were recorded as imported from Scotland in 1835. (Economic Re
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