Abstract

Traditional agricultural villages in the dry zone of Sri Lanka are minor watersheds where small earth bank reservoirs provide water for irrigation and domestic purposes. The farmers practise rainfed farming on a shifting basis called chena in the reservoir catchments, which are being degraded due to soil erosion. The consequent sedimentation in reservoirs has reduced the extent of irrigation, and the total farming system has lost its ecological balance and economic sustenance. The present study aimed at identifying suitable farming methods for reservoir catchments in order to prevent further deterioration. The investigation was carried out on plot basis to assess soil loss and runoff from forest, scrub and cultivated lands as well as from four other types of farming lands namely plough-farming, bund-farming and two conservation farming practices: strip mulch and graded hedgerow farming. In graded hedgerow farming hedgerow trees are planted across the slope with a mild gradient of 0.4–0.5%. The study was carried out in a reservoir watershed at Maha Illuppallama, Sri Lanka during 1989/90 major rainy season. Results indicated that the two conservation farming practices generate 33–34% annual runoff while replenishing soil moisture of the watershed. Soil loss data showed that the conservation farming practices provide more than 80% protection against soil erosion while bunding can provide only 40% protection compared to existing shifting cultivation practices.

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