1. Introduction
Irrigated agriculture withdraws more water compared to other sectors [
1]. The demand and competition for water are growing because of the growing global population [
2]. Irrigated agriculture might provide approximately 55% of the world’s food supply by 2050 [
3]. Yet, the expansion of irrigation would need 40% more extractions of water for this sector alone, which will affect aquatic systems. However, in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), there is very little irrigation expansion [
4], and the development of irrigation seems realistic [
5]. Increasing the irrigated area in SSA would raise irrigation’s impact on access to food from merely 5% today to an optimistic 11% in 2050 [
3].
As of 2050, global food production needs a 70% increase [
6]. This increases the demand to harvest sufficient food for future generations with limited available water for agriculture. Applying suitable and water-saving irrigation strategies are required to realize the rising food demand with the available water [
7]. In developing countries, irrigated agricultural productivity has been constrained by socio-economic and institutional factors including insufficient access to credit and lack of access to inputs [
7]. Also, lack of access to improved technologies, the absence of irrigation infrastructures, inadequate water supply, and improper water management decrease the success of irrigation performance [
8].
Land degradation including soil salinity, soil acidity, and low nutrient content [
9] along with bad climate conditions affect crop production through crop failure and facilitating pests/weeds or diseases [
7]. The absence of leveled irrigable land restricts the expansion of irrigation areas. Lack of transport infrastructures [
9] and limited market-linkages also hamper the development of irrigation schemes [
10]. Securing irrigation water and constructing roads could simplify irrigation works and mobility that could improve sustainable productivity [
11].
Most of the time, farmers over-irrigate, which unnecessarily increases the cost of production and may leach nutrients out of the root-zone [
12]. Yet, occasionally, farmers under-irrigate resulting in reduced productivity because of water shortage during critical stages of plant life [
13]. Increasing irrigation efficiency by applying improved water management strategies could be the prime objective for sustainable irrigated agriculture [
12]. This could be achieved by improving farmer’s knowledge, particularly on how, how much and when to irrigate [
8]. This could reduce labor and fuel costs, improve the quality of the products, and foster equitable water distribution within the irrigation schemes [
14].
Different small, medium and large-scale irrigation schemes are being practiced in various parts of Ethiopia, yet productivity is low [
15]. For irrigation to become effective and sustainable, its development needs to solve the major constraints [
16]. To date, there is no information about farmer’s soil and irrigation water management strategies, their awareness and major constraints in Ethiopia, particularly where large-scale irrigation schemes are found. Koga is among the currently functioning large-scale irrigation schemes (>7000 ha) in the country, but with performance being constrained by many problems [
17], was selected as a study object. It is representative of other large-scale irrigation schemes in the country. This study targets to (i) evaluate farmers’ soil and irrigation water management strategies; (ii) assess the major constraint’s related to soil and irrigation water management and agricultural productivity; and (iii) explore farmer’s perception about soil and irrigation water management practices, agricultural productivity, and water use efficiency.
4. Discussion
In strongly acid soils like in Koga large-scale irrigation scheme, potassium, calcium and magnesium are depleted probably due to leaching. The sodium adsorption ratio was low, which indicates that the salinity level is low and has no impact on crop growth with these ranges [
19]. The farmers’ perception and soil lab results showed that farmers’ local knowledge is vital, and should be valued and combined with scientific findings to have a better soil type and fertility status information. Farmer’s described and classified the soils using locally acquired knowledge from generations of experience that fit local conditions [
31]. Orimoloye [
32] found that farmer’s soil fertility ranking was significantly associated with values of organic carbon and available
P gained from lab analysis. Also, Assefa & Hans-Rudolf [
33] reported that farmers have a wealth of experience in recognizing soil fertility decline. Obour et al. [
34] agreed on the need for integration to exploit the strengths of local knowledge, improve mutual learning between farmers and soil scientists, build the capacity of farmers, and improve their decision on the soil used for agricultural production. Abera and Belachew [
35] also reported that farmers used soil color, texture, water holding capacity, fertilizer requirement (inherent fertility), and workability as criteria to identify different soil types.
Irrigation scheduling allows an improvement in water resources management, which is very important in arid and semiarid areas. In line with this idea, Derib [
36] reported that improving the water use efficiency (WUE) of irrigation systems entails designing an efficient irrigation schedule decision support system. Detailed information and knowledge about water availability, soil conditions, crops response to water stress and root depth are required to design effective irrigation scheduling [
37]. However, in our study area, the tradition of applying irrigation scheduling was very low, and farmers applied over-irrigation. Improved irrigation scheduling is thus important to use the optimum amount of limited water [
38]. In agreement with this finding, previous studies stated that irrigated agriculture has been constrained by unwise use of water due to lack of technical skills [
39,
40].
In irrigated agriculture, WUE can be taken as a measure of sound and sustainable irrigation water management strategy. In Koga, the WUE of irrigated crops was found to be very low and needs to be improved for sustainable crop production and food supply. This could be achieved through applying integrated soil fertility management combined with deficit irrigation strategies. Under deficit irrigation and integrated soil fertility management field experiment, an enhanced wheat WUE (2.21 and 2.36 kg m
−3) was found from lime and manure treated fields compared with only fertilizer treated plots (1.10 and 1.34 kg m
−3) with the same amount of irrigation water in 2018 and 2019, respectively [
41]. A study conducted to simulate soil fertility effects on WUE in northwest Ethiopia by Erkossa et al. [
42] showed increased maize WUE by 48% and 54%, with near-optimal and non-limiting soil fertility conditions. Derib [
36] also found that the WUE of wheat varied from 0.2 to 1.63 kg m
−3, which revealed that a substantial amount of water was lost due to over-irrigation in the case of low WUE practices. Similarly, comparable findings were reported [
43,
44]. To improve the WUE of crops, considering soil management parallel to irrigation water management is of paramount importance.
In Koga large-scale irrigation scheme, crop yield was considerably low. The yield reduction in Koga may be attributed to over-irrigation and soil fertility decline. Over-irrigation may adversely affect production through creating poor soil aeration, waterlogging associated root diseases and leaching of nutrients from the shallow crop-root zone [
12]. From four seasons deficit irrigation and integrated soil fertility field experiment, Asmamaw et al. [
41] found 3.2 and 5.4 t ha
−1 in 2018 and 3.3 and 5.6 t ha
−1 wheat grain yield in 2019, respectively, under only inorganic fertilizer, and liming and manure treated plots at full irrigation, respectively. The higher yield increment at liming and manuring plots proved that soil fertility decline could be one of the main reasons for low yield. This infers that the existing soil and irrigation water management strategies have to be improved to improve yield. Similarly, many findings revealed that in irrigated agriculture low crop yield reports were documented [
18,
43,
45].
Soil salinization, waterlogging and soil nutrient mining are the most widely observed problems in irrigated agriculture fields [
19]. However, in the Koga irrigation scheme, soil acidity has been hindering crop productivity. The soil lab analysis results and household perception showed that the soil is strongly acidic and needs to be addressed through applying integrated soil fertility management practices. A study by Abate et al. [
46] found that soil acidity and Al-toxicity problems are mostly found in high rainfall areas of the northwest parts of Ethiopia, where this study was conducted. The use of crop residues for fuel, livestock feed, and building materials also hampered the extensive application of compost and manure for soil management [
47]. Similarly, the use of lime is constrained by inaccessibility, high cost related to the bulk volume, and transport [
46]. They further explained that soil acidity and mineral toxicities stunted the growth of plants, and thus, resulted in low productivity. Haileslassie et al. [
18] reported that nutrients, particularly soluble salts, are depleted due to leaching by over-irrigation and high rainfall, hence soil acidity could develop overtime.
Water scarcity has been hampering the performance of the Koga irrigation scheme and unwise use of irrigation water was mentioned as the main reasons. This implies that improved irrigation water strategies have to be introduced to enhance sustainable productivity. In line with our finding, Yohannes et al. [
48] reported that water shortage adversely affects farmers in northern Ethiopia. Similarly, Hagos [
13] stated that irrigation water applied by farmers in every irrigation event was higher than the required depth. Also, Lebdi [
49] indicated that irrigation expansion and better water management are important to increase production under water scarcity conditions. Under these conditions, designing improved irrigation water management strategies could be essential to address irrigation challenges facing water scarcity in quantity [
50,
51]. Similarly, adopting deficit irrigation strategies can result in expanding the area under irrigation with 100–137%, 100–300%, 100–233%, and 100–134% more land for maize, wheat, onion, tomato, and teff, respectively, for the same quantity of irrigation water [
52]. This implies that the water scarcity problem could be reduced if farmers apply deficit irrigation. Haileslassie et al. [
18] also confirmed that the existing irrigation water management has to be improved to increase productivity in Ethiopia.
Market-linkages are very essential to the success of irrigated agriculture [
53]. It is not only important to realizing cash crop’s income potential, but also critical to ensuring that farmers produce properly for existing demand and invest wisely for future inputs. Many irrigated crops are highly perishable, making speed-to-market especially important to capture their value. Local markets may not be as strong, given crop’s high prices, which means strong links to profitable urban markets is essential [
40]. Strong market-linkages also encourage irrigators to invest in high-value crops [
53]. In line with this study, Mengistie and Kidane [
10] reported that market access was the main problem for irrigation development. Even in cases where markets are available, now, if various farmers grow similar crops, markets eventually become saturated. The absorption of produce and market access has been the main constraint for farmers [
54]. In an irrigation performance assessment conducted in Ethiopia, Descheemaeker et al. [
40] found that limited access to market infrastructure was the most common problem for the strengthening of irrigation schemes.