|
It
takes both soil and water to grow any crop. Therefore the conservation
of soil and water is of utmost importance.
The conservation of soil includes the use of Best
Management Practices
(BMPs) such as fieldstrips, buffers, waterways, terraces, and tillage
practices; as well as many others. The goal is to prevent soil erosion
from
occurring in crops and fields. When erosion occurs, runoff water carries
the soil into local streams and water supplies.
This has a direct effect on water conservation and quality. When cropland
soils erode into nearby streams and water supplies, the soil is taking
nutrients with it.
Sometimes these nutrients may be good for plants, but not good for
water quality.
These nutrients, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and pesticides,
are actually polluting the water supply, potentially harming local
wildlife as well as humans.
Kansas State University Contact:
Dan Devlin, Professor
and Extension Specialist, Environmental Quality
Kansas State University
2014 Throckmorton
Manhattan, KS 66506
785.532.0393
Incentive Programs:
Water
Resources Program - State Conservation Commission (SCC) - State Cost
Share
Nonpoint
Source Pollution Program (NPS) -
State Conservation Commission (SCC) - State Cost Share
Environmental
Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) - Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Conservation
Reserve Program (CRP) - United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
Water Conservation
Planning - Kansas Water Office Programs
Kansas
Clean Waters - Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE)
- Apply for a grant!
Publications:
K-State Research and Extension
Soil and Water
Conservation
Maintaining Grass Waterways
Nutrient and Pesticide Management - Website
Effects of Conservation Practices on Water Quality: Sediment
Streambank Revetment
Establishing Riparian Buffers
Assessing the Effectiveness of Various Riparian Buffer Vegetation Types
Value of Crop Residue
Water Quality Best Management Practices, Effectiveness, and Cost for Reducing Contaminant Losses from Cropland
Considering Strip-Tillage
Terrace Maintenance
Soil Conservation
Reclaiming Flooded Land with Tillage 
Soil Compaction - Problems and Solutions
Soil
Nutrient Management After the Flood
Best Management Practices for Phosphorus
Phosphorus Facts— Soil, Plant, and Fertilizer
Effects of Nitrogen Fertilizer On Soil
Water Conservation
Water Quality Protection: Best Management Practices for Cropland
Phosphorus
and Water Quality in Kansas
Suspended Solids: A Water Quality Concern for Kansas
Water Conservation in the Home Landscape
Dollars Down the Drain? Conserving Water in the Home
Developing New Water Conservation Technologies: An Investment in the Future of Kansas
Search for other
soil and water conservation related extension publications.
Other publications:
Kansas Water
Resource Institute (KWRI) - Website
Water Conservation
and Use - Kansas Center for Agricultural Resources and the Environment
(KCARE)
Water Conservation and Management in Crop Systems -
Kansas Center for Agricultural Resources and the Environment (KCARE)
Health Education
Facts: Water Conservation -
Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE)
Understanding Grazing Land and Water Quality -
Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE)
Water Conservation - Kansas Water Office
Water Conservation
- Ogallalah Aquifer - State Conservation Commission (SCC)
|