Abstract:
In India and also in many parts of the world,
vast tracts of waste-lands are due to alkalinity of
the soils. An alkali soil contains sufficient exchange
able sodium, which causes the soil to disperse and to
increase in the pH. The excess sodium causes the for
mation of hard crusts at its surface-layer, and also
adversely affects its physical and nutritional proper
ties. In order to produce more food to meet the needs
of increasing population, it becomes obligatory to
reclaim these barren alkali lands.
Reclamation of alkali soil requires the removal
of excessive exchangeable sodium and its replacement
by calcium, followed by the leaching of the soil. This
is popularly accomplished by the application of chemical
compounds such as gypsum, pyrites, etc., followed by
leaching. .
The hard crust formed at the top surface of the
alkali soils reduces the infiltration considerably, and
thus most of the incipient rainfall is transformed into
runoff. As the alkali soil gets reclaimed, its hydrologic
characteristics change considerably.
The present v^rk is an extension of the research
conducted in the Central Soil Salinity Research Institute
(CSSRI), Karnal (India). The data used pertain to the
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Kachwa watershed, which underwent reclamation from
1976 to 1979. Detailed surface hydrologic investigations
have been carried out for the runoff computations of
this watershed.
To ascertain the effect of reclamation on the
surface runoff, the Instantaneous Unit Hydrographs and
subsequently short duration unit hydrographs have been
computed for different degrees of reclamation. The twoparameter
conceptual model consisting of a cascade of
linear reservoirs (Nash, 1957) is used for the purpose.
The effect of reclamation on the model parameters, nK
and K, is established. Also, the influence of the
reclamation on the unit hydrograph parameters namely,
the peak ordinate, the time lag, and time base, is estab
lished. A coaxial graph illustrating these influences
is prepared for the Kachwa watershed. The effect of
reclamation on the specific peak discharge has also been
worked out. The unit hydrograph studies thus indicate
that the surface storages do change as reclamation
proceeds.
Attempts have been made to carry out a detailed
study of the changing surface storage characteristics
of the watershed sys+sm through conceptual configurations
of linear reservoirs. The Kachwa watershed (though small
in area) is treated as the pilot test watershed for the
surface hydrologic studies that may be applied on medium
to large alkali watersheds undergoing reclamation. For
a small watershed, the entire system is considered to
be lumped and time-invariant. To start with, the Single
Linear Reservoir (SLR) Model has been tried for simul
ating the hydrologic responses. For Kachwa watershed,
the SLR Model did not give satisfactory results. Such a
model did not take into account the surface storage
function adequately.
However, for this purpose an additional routing
element of a linear reservoir, attached in series to
the SLR, has been found to be of great use. Therefore,
a simple model of two linear reservoirs in series has
adequately represented the alkali watershed under recla
mation. The additional linear reservoir has a damping
effect on the response of the SLR Model. The effects of
reclamation on the storage coefficients of the two linear
reservoirs have been studied in detail.
The proposed configuration of the cascade of two
linear reservoirs in series is essentially a lumped
system. A careful examination has revealed that the sur
face storages behaved differently in unreclaimed and
reclaimed parts of t\e watershed. As a first attempt for
a medium watershed, a distributed system has been consi
dered in which two linear reservoirs (one representing
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the unreclaimed part of the watershed, whereas the other,
the reclaimed part) are connected to acommon routing
element of another linear reservoir. The exact differ
ential equations for the system have been worked out
and the results obtained have been found to be encouraging.
Further, for large alkali watershed undergoing
reclamation, whose surface storages may not be taken
care of adequately with the proposed distributed system
of three linear reservoirs, amodified version, comprising
of two strings, each having two linear reservoirs in
series, has been conceived of. The reclaimed areas of
the watershed are conceptually represented by one string,
whereas the unreclaimed alkali lands are taken care of
by the other string. Both of these strings are connected
to arouting element, which is also a linear reservoir.
The proposed model has been tested with the available
storm events for different degrees of reclamation.
A thorough scrutiny of the reclamation process
reveals that the reclamation proceeds from plot to plot.
Plots so identified are bunded, treated,and leached.
Subsequently, paddy crops are sown to promote the process
of leaching. Water stood in the paddy fields and the
transfer of water (a.footing the surface storages) very
much depended on the agronomic practices followed. These
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phenomena can be studied through distributed parameter
approaches. For this purpose, the time-area-concentrat
ion based approach has been tried. The genetic principle
of runoff has been correlated with the convolution
process to distribute the storage effects over the entire
watershed. An isochronal pattern suited for reclamation
process is determined. The runoff factors for different
parts of the watershed and for various storm events are
computed. The proposed model can give idea about the
involvement of different parts of the watershed in the
runoff process.
The proposed lumped and distributed parameter
models developed to account for the surface hydrologic
responses have been tested for the available storm data
of the Kachwa watershed. The results so obtained have
been critically examined, and logical conclusions have
been drawn.