The Sustainability of Irrigation with Gypsiferous Mine Water and Implications for the Mining Industry in South Africa

International journal of mine water - Tập 21 - Trang 81-90 - 2014
J. G. Annandale1, N. Z. Jovanovic1, P. D. Tanner2, N. Benadé3, H. M. Du Plessis4
1Dept of Plant Production and Soil Science, Univ of Pretoria, Pretoria 0001, South Africa, South Africa
2Anglo Base Metals, 55 Marshall Street, Johannesburg 2107, South Africa, South Africa
3NB Systems, Private Bag 15102, Sinoville 0129, South Africa, South Africa
4Water Research Commission, Private Bag 824, Pretoria 0001, South Africa; e-mail: [email protected], South Africa

Tóm tắt

The sustainability of irrigation with gypsiferous mine water and different irrigation management practices was evaluated using a milti-disciplinary approach, where crop response was investigated along with the impact on soil and groundwater resources. Field trials carried out at two mines (Landau and Kleinkopje Colliery, Mpumalanga Province, South Africa) indicated that a wide range of species can be cropped for commercial purposes under irrigation with this water. Chemical analyses of groundwater underlying irrigated areas indicated that contamination of groundwater did not occur after three years. The results of a glasshouse trial indicated that the inclusion of NH4 + for N-fertilization in a NO3 −-NH4 + ratio of 2:1 to 1:1 is advantageous to root and top growth of wheat. According to simulations run with the Soil Water Balance (SWB) model and the CLIMGEN weather data generator, soil chemical and physical properties will not be irreparably damaged after thirty years of irrigation. Perennial pastures, irrigated at high frequency, provided the highest net farm income and water utilization.