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Alternate Wet/Dry Irrigation in Rice Cultivation: A Practical Way to Save Water and Control Malaria and Japanese Encephalitis

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Document (.pdf, .doc)
262
Published: 
Monday, January 1, 2001
U.S. Agency for International Development
Due to increasing scarcity of freshwater resources that are available for irrigated agriculture, in the future it will be necessary to produce more food with less water. More irrigated land is devoted to rice than any other crop. One method to save water in irrigated rice cultivation is the intermittent drying of the rice fields instead of keeping them continuously flooded. This method is referred to as an alternate wet-dry irrigation.
Theme(s) & Sub-theme(s): 
AgricultureWater Supply and ScarcityIntegrated Water Resource Management
Resource type: 
Topical Report
Region & Countries: 
South East Asia
Resource Scale: 
Regional

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