Field studies of water and salt movement in an irrigated swelling clay soil. I. Infiltration during ponding

Infiltration and deep percolation were measured during ponding of a saline sodic cracking clay soil, commonly used for rice production in the Riverina of New South Wales. Because gypsum may be used to ameliorate this soil for row cropping, the effect of incorporating gypsum into the plough layer was determined. Without gypsum, 292mm water infiltrated in 379 days of ponding, wetting the profile to approximately 2.1 m. In contrast when gypsum was incorporated in the plough layer, 605 mm of water infiltrated in 145 days, and water had penetrated beyond 4.5 m in 57 days. In the latter case, sufficient water percolated below 2.0m to raise the groundwater level by as much as 10m. The infiltration rate for the unameliorated soil was similar to values determined by others; for the ameliorated soil, infiltration behaviour was more like that of non-sodic self-mulching grey or brown clays, and raises questions regarding the amount of deep percolation when rice is grown on such soils.