Water-Saving Practices

Conserving and Preserving Water on Texas Farms

Ongoing drought conditions and an aging water infrastructure are key contributors to the sharp decline of available groundwater in Texas. In response, farmers are working hard to establish effective practices and helpful partnerships to grow more food using less water. Successful results are essential to the continued thriving and growth of Texas.

Protecting water sources involves conserving and preserving both soil and water simultaneously. In other words, saving water in Texas is an impossible feat without farmer actions that improve the health of their soil.

“The water cycle and soil are linked and can’t be separated.
They just go together like peanut butter and jelly.”

John Sacket

NRCS Soil Scientist

Protecting Water Sources Requires Healthy Soil

Healthy soil is the foundation for meeting the food needs of Texans. Farmers invest in practices to enrich their soil because soil provides five essential functions that impact water:

The four principles…

Soil Health 

According to Ernesto Favelta, NRCS District Conservationist in Lubbock County, Texas , four principles of soil health promote improved soil structure and water conservation for farmers:

Maximize biodiversity

Diversity on a farm provides a break in disease and weed cycles, improved plant growth and a better habitat for organisms that live within the soil. Common farmer practices that improve diversity include the incorporation of crop rotation and/or the integration of livestock, like cattle or sheep.

Maximize presence of living roots

Plant roots provide structure for soil to prevent erosion from wind or rain. The adoption of practices like crop rotation promotes helpful root growth. Proper fertilization is also essential in order to maximize healthy root systems.

Maximize soil cover

Farmers leave plant residue behind after harvest, or plant cover crops, for good reason. It keeps water on the field and out of waterways. The result is maximizing water from irrigation and rainfall, as well as protecting local waterways from soil runoff that contains nutrients intended for plant growth.

Minimize disturbance

It is impossible to avoid some disturbances to soil when planting crops, applying fertilizers and protectants, running harvesting equipment and grazing livestock. But minimizing these disturbances reduces soil compaction, improves soil health and leads to less water runoff. Farmer options to minimize soil disturbances include practices like strip tillage or no tillage and incorporating fencing for a system called “prescribed grazing”, which is a sequence of grazing and resting grassland to prevent livestock from overgrazing pastures.

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While investing in soil health is an important practice for protecting water sources.

Texas farmers are also investing in new and different types of irrigation systems to replace their aging, less efficient equipment.

For example, updating an irrigation system to a center pivot can significantly improve water efficiency and water distribution. Yet, unfortunately , the expense is often prohibitive for farmers to consider the investment alone.

Drip irrigation systems deliver water directly to the roots of a crop, minimising water loss evaporation and runoff. Drip irrigation can also play a helpful role in controlling weeds. But similar to installing other new types of irrigation systems, drip irrigation options are often too costly for farmers.

Overcoming the
Costs of Conservation

Thankfully there are programs that provide both technical assistance and cost invest in updated irrigation equipment and irrigation practices. In particular, the USDA invests money in Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) through the NRCS in Texas.

EQIP can provide partial reimbursement to qualifying farmers for their purchase of a more efficient irrigation system.

NRCS technical assistance is also available to advise the farmer in optimizing the new system for their particular soil, land and operation.