CHAPTER VIII
REGULATING THE EVAPORATION
THE demonstration in the last chapter that the
water which falls as rain or snow may be stored in the soil for the use of plants
is of first importance in dry-farming, for it makes the farmer independent, in a
large measure, of the distribution of the rainfall. The dry-farmer who goes into
the summer with a soil well stored with water cares little whether summer rains come
or not, for he knows that his crops will mature in spite of external drouth. In fact,
as will be shown later, in many dry-farm sections where the summer rains are light
they are a positive detriment to the farmer who by careful farming has stored his
deep soil with an abundance of water. Storing the soil with water is, however, only
the first step in making the rains of fall, winter, or the preceding year available
for plant growth. As soon as warm growing weather comes, water-dissipating forces
come into play, and water is lost by evaporation. The farmer must, therefore, use
all precautions to keep the moisture in the soil until such time as the roots of
the crop may draw it into the plants to be used in plant production. That is, as
far as possible, direct evaporation of water from the soil must be prevented.
Few farmers really realize the immense possible
annual evaporation in the dry-farm territory. It is always much larger than the total
annual rainfall. In fact, an arid region may be defined as one in which under natural
conditions several times more water evaporates annually from a free water surface
than falls as rain and snow. For that reason many students of aridity pay little
attention to temperature, relative humidity, or winds, and simply measure the evaporation
from a free water surface in the locality in question. In order to obtain a measure
of the aridity, MacDougal has constructed the following table, showing the annual
precipitation and the annual evaporation at several well-known localities in the
dry-farm territory.
True, the localities included in the following
table are extreme, but they illustrate the large possible evaporation, ranging from
about six to thirty-five times the precipitation. At the same time it must be borne
in mind that while such rates of evaporation may occur from free water surfaces,
the evaporation from agricultural soils under like conditions is very much smaller.
| Place |
Annual Precipitation
(In Inches) |
Annual Evaporation
(In Inches) |
Ratio |
| El Paso, Texas |
9.23 |
80 |
8.7 |
| Fort Wingate, New Mexico |
14.00 |
80 |
5.7 |
| Fort Yuma, Arizona |
2.84 |
100 |
35.2 |
| Tucson, AZ |
11.74 |
90 |
7.7 |
| Mohave, CA |
4.97 |
95 |
19.1 |
| Hawthorne, Nevada |
4.50 |
80 |
17.5 |
| Winnemucca, Nevada |
9.51 |
80 |
9.6 |
| St. George, Utah |
6.46 |
90 |
13.9 |
| Fort Duchesne, Utah |
6.49 |
75 |
11.6 |
| Pineville, Oregon |
9.01 |
70 |
7.8 |
| Lost River, Idaho |
8.47 |
70 |
8.3 |
| Laramie, Wyoming |
9.81 |
70 |
7.1 |
| Torres, Mexico |
16.97 |
100 |
6.0 |
To understand the methods employed for checking
evaporation from the soil, it is necessary to review briefly the conditions that
determine the evaporation of water into the air, and the manner in which water moves
in the soil.
The formation of water vapor
Whenever water is left freely exposed to the
air, it evaporates; that is, it passes into the gaseous state and mixes with the
gases of the air. Even snow and ice give off water vapor, though in very small quantities.
The quantity of water vapor which can enter a given volume of air is definitely limited.
For instance, at the temperature of freezing water 2.126 grains of water vapor can
enter one cubic foot of air, but no more. When air contains all the water possible,
it is said to be saturated, and evaporation then ceases. The practical effect of
this is the well-known experience that on the seashore, where the air is often very
nearly fully saturated with water vapor, the drying of clothes goes on very slowly,
whereas in the interior, like the dry-farming territory, away from the ocean, where
the air is far from being saturated, drying goes on very rapidly.
The amount of water necessary to saturate air
varies greatly with the temperature. It is to be noted that as the temperature increases,
the amount of water that may be held by the air also increases; and proportionately
more rapidly than the increase in temperature. This is generally well understood
in common experience, as in drying clothes rapidly by hanging them before a hot fire.
At a temperature of 100° F., which is often reached in portions of the dry-farm
territory during the growing season, a given volume of air can hold more than nine
times as much water vapor as at the temperature of freezing water. This is an exceedingly
important principle in dry-farm practices, for it explains the relatively easy possibility
of storing water during the fall and winter when the temperature is low and the moisture
usually abundant, and the greater difficulty of storing the rain that falls largely,
as in the Great Plains area, in the summer when water-dissipating forces are very
active. This law also emphasizes the truth that it is in times of warm weather that
every precaution must be taken to prevent the evaporation of water from the soil
surface.
| Temperature in Degrees F. |
Grains of Water held in One Cubic Foot of Air |
| 32 |
2.126 |
| 40 |
2.862 |
| 50 |
4.089 |
| 60 |
5.756 |
| 70 |
7.992 |
| 80 |
10.949 |
| 90 |
14.810 |
| 100 |
19.790 |
It is of course well understood that the atmosphere
as a whole is never saturated with water vapor. Such saturation is at the best only
local, as, for instance, on the seashore during quiet days, when the layer of air
over the water may be fully saturated, or in a field containing much water from which,
on quiet warm days, enough water may evaporate to saturate the layer of air immediately
upon the soil and around the plants. Whenever, in such cases, the air begins to move
and the wind blows, the saturated air is mixed with the larger portion of unsaturated
air, and evaporation is again increased. Meanwhile, it must be borne in mind that
into a layer of saturated air resting upon a field of growing plants very little
water evaporates, and that the chief water-dissipating power of winds lies in the
removal of this saturated layer. Winds or air movements of any kind, therefore, become
enemies of the farmer who depends upon a limited rainfall.
The amount of water actually found in a given
volume of air at a certain temperature, compared with the largest amount it can hold,
is called the relative humidity of the air. As shown in Chapter IV, the relative
humidity becomes smaller as the rainfall decreases. The lower the relative humidity
is at a given temperature, the more rapidly will water evaporate into the air. There
is no more striking confirmation of this law than the fact that at a temperature
of 90° sunstrokes and similar ailments are reported in great number from New
York, while the people of Salt Lake City are perfectly comfortable. In New York the
relative humidity in summer is about 73 per cent; in Salt Lake City, about 35 per
cent. At a high summer temperature evaporation from the skin goes on slowly in New
York and rapidly in Salt Lake City, with the resulting discomfort or comfort. Similarly,
evaporation from soils goes on rapidly under a low and slowly under a high percentage
of relative humidity.
Evaporation from water surfaces is hastened,
therefore, by (1) an increase in the temperature, (2) an increase in the air movements
or winds, and (3) a decrease in the relative humidity. The temperature is higher;
the relative humidity lower, and the winds usually more abundant in arid than in
humid regions. The dry-farmer must consequently use all possible precautions to prevent
evaporation from the soil.
Conditions of evaporation from from soils
Evaporation does not alone occur from a surface
of free water. All wet or moist substances lose by evaporation most of the water
that they hold, providing the conditions of temperature and relative humidity are
favorable. Thus, from a wet soil, evaporation is continually removing water. Yet,
under ordinary conditions, it is impossible to remove all the water, for a small
quantity is attracted so strongly by the soil particles that only a temperature above
the boiling point of water will drive it out. This part of the soil is the hygroscopic
moisture spoken of in the last chapter.
Moreover, it must be kept in mind that evaporation
does not occur as rapidly from wet soil as from a water surface, unless all the soil
pores are so completely filled with water that the soil surface is practically a
water surface. The reason for this reduced evaporation from a wet soil is almost
self-evident. There is a comparatively strong attraction between soil and water,
which enables the moisture to cling as a thin capillary film around the soil particles,
against the force of gravity. Ordinarily, only capillary water is found in well-tilled
soil, and the force causing evaporation must be strong enough to overcome this attraction
besides changing the water into vapor.
The less water there is in a soil, the thinner
the water film, and the more firmly is the water held. Hence, the rate of evaporation
decreases with the decrease in soil-moisture. This law is confirmed by actual field
tests. For instance, as an average of 274 trials made at the Utah Station, it was
found that three soils, otherwise alike, that contained, respectively, 22.63 per
cent, 17.14 per cent, and 12.75 per cent of water lost in two weeks, to a depth of
eight feet, respectively 21.0, 17. 1, and 10.0 pounds of water per square foot. Similar
experiments conducted elsewhere also furnish proof of the correctness of this principle.
From this point of view the dry-farmer does not want his soils to be unnecessarily
moist. The dry-farmer can reduce the per cent of water in the soil without diminishing
the total amount of water by so treating the soil that the water will distribute
itself to considerable depths. This brings into prominence again the practices of
fall plowing, deep plowing, subsoiling, and the choice of deep soils for dry-farming.
Very much for the same reasons, evaporation goes
on more slowly from water in which salt or other substances have been dissolved.
The attraction between the water and the dissolved salt seems to be strong enough
to resist partially the force causing evaporation. Soil-water always contains some
of the soil ingredients in solution, and consequently under the given conditions
evaporation occurs more slowly from soil-water than from pure water. Now, the more
fertile a soil is, that is, the more soluble plant-food it contains, the more material
will be dissolved in the soil-water, and as a result the more slowly will evaporation
take place. Fallowing, cultivation, thorough plowing and manuring, which increase
the store of soluble plant-food, all tend to diminish evaporation. While these conditions
may have little value in the eyes of the farmer who is under an abundant rainfall,
they are of great importance to the dry-farmer. It is only by utilizing every possibility
of conserving water and fertility that dry-farming may be made a perfectly safe practice.
Loss by evaporation chiefly at the surface
Evaporation goes on from every wet substance.
Water evaporates therefore from the wet soil grains under the surface as well as
from those at the surface. In developing a system of practice which will reduce evaporation
to a minimum it must be learned whether the water which evaporates from the soil
particles far below the surface is carried in large quantities into the atmosphere
and thus lost to plant use. Over forty years ago, Nessler subjected this question
to experiment and found that the loss by evaporation occurs almost wholly at the
soil surface, and that very little if any is lost directly by evaporation from the
lower soil layers. Other experimenters have confirmed this conclusion, and very recently
Buckingham, examining the same subject, found that while there is a very slow upward
movement of the soil gases into the atmosphere, the total quantity of the water thus
lost by direct evaporation from soil, a foot below the surface, amounted at most
to one inch of rainfall in six years. This is insignificant even under semiarid and
arid conditions. However, the rate of loss of water by direct evaporation from the
lower soil layers increases with the porosity of the soil, that is, with the space
not filled with soil particles or water. Fine-grained soils, therefore, lose the
least water in this manner. Nevertheless, if coarse-grained soils are well filled
with water, by deep fall plowing and by proper summer fallowing for the conservation
of moisture, the loss of moisture by direct evaporation from the lower soil layers
need not be larger than from finer grained soils
Thus again are emphasized the principles previously
laid down that, for the most successful dry-farming, the soil should always be kept
well filled with moisture, even if it means that the land, after being broken, must
lie fallow for one or two seasons, until a sufficient amount of moisture has accumulated.
Further, the correlative principle is emphasized that the moisture in dry-farm lands
should be stored deeply, away from the immediate action of the sun's rays upon the
land surface. The necessity for deep soils is thus again brought out.
The great loss of soil moisture due to an accumulation
of water in the upper twelve inches is well brought out in the experiments conducted
by the Utah Station. The following is selected from the numerous data on the subject.
Two soils, almost identical in character, contained respectively 17.57 per cent and
16.55 per cent of water on an average to a depth of eight feet; that is, the total
amount of water held by the two soils was practically identical. Owing to varying
cultural treatment, the distribution of the water in the soil was not uniform; one
contained 23.22 per cent and the other 16.64 per cent of water in the first twelve
inches. During the first seven days the soil that contained the highest percentage
of water in the first foot lost 13.30 pounds of water, while the other lost only
8.48 pounds per square foot. This great difference was due no doubt to the fact that
direct evaporation takes place in considerable quantity only in the upper twelve
inches of soil, where the sun's heat has a full chance to act.
Any practice which enables the rains to sink
quickly to considerable depths should be adopted by the dry-farmer. This is perhaps
one of the great reasons for advocating the expensive but usually effective subsoil
plowing on dry-farms. It is a very common experience, in the arid region, that great,
deep cracks form during hot weather. From the walls of these cracks evaporation goes
on, as from the topsoil, and the passing winds renew the air so that the evaporation
may go on rapidly. The dry-farmer must go over the land as often as needs be with
some implement that will destroy and fill up the cracks that may have been formed.
In a field of growing crops this is often difficult to do; but it is not impossible
that hand hoeing, expensive as it is, would pay well in the saving of soil moisture
and the consequent increase in crop yield.
How soil water reaches the surface
It may be accepted as an established truth that
the direct evaporation of water from wet soils occurs almost wholly at the surface.
Yet it is well known that evaporation from the soil surface may continue until the
soil-moisture to a depth of eight or ten feet or more is depleted. This is shown
by the following analyses of dry-farm soil in early spring and midsummer. No attempt
was made to conserve the moisture in the soil:--
| Per cent of water in |
1st foot |
2nd
foot |
3rd
foot |
4th
foot |
5th
foot |
6th
foot |
7th
foot |
8th
foot |
Avg |
| Early spring |
20.84 |
20.06 |
19.62 |
18.28 |
18.70 |
14.29 |
14.48 |
13.83 |
17.51 |
| Midsummer |
8.83 |
8.87 |
11.03 |
9.59 |
11.27 |
11.03 |
8.95 |
9.47 |
9.88 |
In this case water had undoubtedly passed by
capillary movement from the depth of eight feet to a point near the surface where
direct evaporation could occur. As explained in the last chapter, water which is
held as a film around the soil particles is called capillary water; and it is in
the capillary form that water may be stored in dry-farm soils. Moreover, it is the
capillary soil-moisture alone which is of real value in crop production. This capillary
water tends to distribute itself uniformly throughout the soil, in accordance with
the prevailing conditions and forces. If no water is removed from the soil, in course
of time the distribution of the soil-water will be such that the thickness of the
film at any point in the soil mass is a direct resultant of the various forces acting
at that particular point. There will then be no appreciable movement of the soil-moisture.
Such a condition is approximated in late winter or early spring before planting begins.
During the greater part of the year, however, no such quiescent state can occur,
for there are numerous disturbing elements that normally are active, among which
the three most effective are (l) the addition of water to the soil by rains; (2)
the evaporation of water from the topsoil, due to the more active meteorological
factors during spring, summer, and fall; and (3) the abstraction of water from the
soil by plant roots.
Water, entering the soil, moves downward under
the influence of gravity as gravitational water, until under the attractive influence
of the soil it has been converted into capillary water and adheres to the soil particles
as a film. If the soil were dry, and the film therefore thin, the rain water would
move downward only a short distance as gravitational water; if the soil were wet,
and the film therefore thick, the water would move down to a greater distance before
being exhausted. If, as is often the case in humid districts, the soil is saturated,
that is, the film is as thick as the particles can hold, the water would pass right
through the soil and connect with the standing water below. This, of course, is seldom
the case in dry-farm districts. In any soil, excepting one already saturated, the
addition of water will produce a thickening of the soil-water film to the full descent
of the water. This immediately destroys the conditions of equilibrium formerly existing,
for the moisture is not now uniformly distributed. Consequently a process of redistribution
begins which continues until the nearest approach to equilibrium is restored. In
this process water will pass in every direction from the wet portion of the soil
to the drier; it does not necessarily mean that water will actually pass from the
wet portion to the drier portion; usually, at the driest point a little water is
drawn from the adjoining point, which in turn draws from the next, and that from
the next, until the redistribution is complete. The process is very much like stuffing
wool into a sack which already is loosely filled. The new wool does not reach the
bottom of the sack, yet there is more wool in the bottom than there was before.
If a plant-root is actively feeding some distance
under the soil surface, the reverse process occurs. At the feeding point the root
continually abstracts water from the soil grains and thus makes the film thinner
in that locality. This causes a movement of moisture similar to the one above described,
from the wetter portions of the soil to the portion being dried out by the action
of the plant-root. Soil many feet or even rods distant may assist in supplying such
an active root with moisture. When the thousands of tiny roots sent out by each plant
are recalled. it may well be understood what a confusion of pulls and counter-pulls
upon the soil- moisture exists in any cultivated soil. In fact, the soil-water film
may be viewed as being in a state of trembling activity, tending to place itself
in full equilibrium with the surrounding contending forces which, themselves, constantly
change. Were it not that the water film held closely around the soil particles is
possessed of extreme mobility, it would not be possible to meet the demands of the
plants upon the water at comparatively great distances. Even as it is, it frequently
happens that when crops are planted too thickly on dry-farms, the soil-moisture cannot
move quickly enough to the absorbing roots to maintain plant growth, and crop failure
results. Incidentally, this points to planting that shall be proportional to the
moisture contained by the soil. See Chapter XI.
As the temperature rises in spring, with a decrease
in the relative humidity, and an increase in direct sunshine, evaporation from the
soil surface increases greatly. However, as the topsoil becomes drier, that is, as
the water fihn becomes thinner, there is an attempt at readjustment, and water moves
upward to take the place of that lost by evaporation. As this continues throughout
the season, the moisture stored eight or ten feet or more below the surface is gradually
brought to the top and evaporated, and thus lost to plant use.
The effect of rapid top drying of soils
As the water held by soils diminishes, and the
water film around the soil grains becomes thinner, the capillary movement of the
soil-water is retarded. This is easily understood by recalling that the soil particles
have an attraction for water, which is of definite value, and may be measured by
the thickest film that may be held against gravity. When the film is thinned, it
does not diminish the attraction of the soil for water; it simply results in a stronger
pull upon the water and a firmer holding of the film against the surfaces of the
soil grains. To move soil-water under such conditions requires the expenditure of
more energy than is necessary for moving water in a saturated or nearly saturated
soil. Under like conditions, therefore, the thinner the soil-water film the more
difficult will be the upward movement of the soil-water and the slower the evaporation
from the topsoil.
As drying goes on, a point is reached at which
the capillary movement of the water wholly ceases. This is probably when little more
than the hygroscopic moisture remains. In fact, very dry soil and water repel each
other. This is shown in the common experience of driving along a road in summer,
immediately after a light shower. The masses of dust are wetted only on the outside,
and as the wheels pass through them the dry dust is revealed. It is an important
fact that very dry soil furnishes a very effective protection against the capillary
movement of water.
In accordance with the principle above established
if the surface soil could be dried to the point where capillarity is very slow, the
evaporation would be diminished or almost wholly stopped. More than a quarter of
a century ago, Eser showed experimentally that soil-water may be saved by drying
the surface soil rapidly. Under dry-farm conditions it frequently occurs that the
draft upon the water of the soil is so great that nearly all the water is quickly
and so completely abstracted from the upper few inches of soil that they are left
as an effective protection against further evaporation. For instance, in localities
where hot dry winds are of common occurrence, the upper layer of soil is sometimes
completely dried before the water in the lower layers can by slow capillary movement
reach the top. The dry soil layer then prevents further loss of water, and the wind
because of its intensity has helped to conserve the soil-moisture. Similarly in localities
where the relative humidity is low, the sunshine abundant, and the temperature high,
evaporation may go on so rapidly that the lower soil layers cannot supply the demands
made, and the topsoil then dries out so completely as to form a protective covering
against further evaporation. It is on this principle that the native desert soils
of the United States, untouched by the plow, and the surfaces of which are sun-baked,
are often found to possess large percentages of water at lower depths. Whitney recorded
this observation with considerable surprise, many years ago, and other observers
have found the same conditions at nearly all points of the arid region. This matter
has been subjected to further study by Buckingham, who placed a variety of soils
under artificially arid and humid conditions. It was found in every case that, the
initial evaporation was greater under arid conditions, but as the process went on
and the topsoil of the arid soil became dry, more water was lost under humid conditions.
For the whole experimental period, also, more water was lost under humid conditions.
It was notable that the dry protective layer was formed more slowly on alkali soils,
which would point to the inadvisability of using alkali lands for dry-farm purposes.
All in all, however, it appears "that under very arid conditions a soil automatically
protects itself from drying by the formation of a natural mulch on the surface."
Naturally, dry-farm soils differ greatly in their
power of forming such a mulch. A heavy clay or a light sandy soil appears to have
less power of such automatic protection than a loamy soil. An admixture of limestone
seems to favor the formation of such a natural protective mulch. Ordinarily, the
farmer can further the formation of a dry topsoil layer by stirring the soil thoroughly.
This assists the sunshine and the air to evaporate the water very quickly. Such cultivation
is very desirable for other reasons also, as will soon be discussed. Meanwhile, the
water-dissipating forces of the dry-farm section are not wholly objectionable, for
whether the land be cultivated or not, they tend to hasten the formation of dry surface
layers of soil which guard against excessive evaporation. It is in moist cloudy weather,
when the drying process is slow, that evaporation causes the greatest losses of soil-moisture.
The effect of shading
Direct sunshine is, next to temperature, the
most active cause of rapid evaporation from moist soil surfaces. Whenever, therefore,
evaporation is not rapid enough to form a dry protective layer of topsoil, shading
helps materially in reducing surface losses of soil-water. Under very arid conditions,
however, it is questionable whether in all cases shading has a really beneficial
effect, though under semiarid or sub-humid conditions the benefits derived from shading
are increased largely. Ebermayer showed in 1873 that the shading due to the forest
cover reduced evaporation 62 per cent, and many experiments since that day have confirmed
this conclusion. At the Utah Station, under arid conditions, it was found that shading
a pot of soil, which otherwise was subjected to water-dissipating influences, saved
29 per cent of the loss due to evaporation from a pot which was not shaded. This
principle cannot be applied very greatly in practice, but it points to a somewhat
thick planting, proportioned to the water held by the soil. It also shows a possible
benefit to be derived from the high header straw which is allowed to stand for several
weeks in dry-farm sections where the harvest comes early and the fall plowing is
done late, as in the mountain states. The high header stubble shades the ground very
thoroughly. Thus the stubble may be made to conserve the soil-moisture in dry-farm
sections, where grain is harvested by the "header" method.
A special case of shading is the mulching of
land with straw or other barnyard litter, or with leaves, as in the forest. Such
mulching reduces evaporation, but only in part, because of its shading action, since
it acts also as a loose top layer of soil matter breaking communication with the
lower soil layers.
Whenever the soil is carefully stirred, as will
be described, the value of shading as a means or checking evaporation disappears
almost entirely. It is only with soils which are tolerably moist at the surface that
shading acts beneficially.

Alfalfa in cultivated rows. This practice is employed to make possible
the growth of alfalfa and other perennial crops on arid lands without irrigation.
The effect of tillage
Capillary soil-moisture moves from particle to
particle until the surface is reached. The closer the soil grains are packed together,
the greater the number of points or contact, and the more easily will the movement
of the soil- moisture proceed. If by any means a layer of the soil is so loosened
as to reduce the number of points of contact, the movement of the soil-moisture is
correspondingly hindered. The process is somewhat similar to the experience in large
r airway stations. Just before train time a great crowd of people is gathered outside
or the gates ready to show their tickets. If one gate is opened, a certain number
of passengers can pass through each minute;
if two are opened, nearly twice as many may be
admitted in the same time; if more gates are opened, the passengers will be able
to enter the train more rapidly. The water in the lower layers of the soil is ready
to move upward whenever a call is made upon it. To reach the surface it must pass
from soil grain to soil grain, and the larger the number of grains that touch, the
more quickly and easily will the water reach the surface, for the points of contact
of the soil particles may be likened to the gates of the railway station. Now if,
by a thorough stirring and loosening of the topsoil, the number of points of contact
between the top and subsoil is greatly reduced, the upward flow of water is thereby
largely checked. Such a loosening of the topsoil for the purpose of reducing evaporation
from the topsoil has come to be called cultivation, and includes plowing, harrowing,
disking, hoeing, and other cultural operations by which the topsoil is stirred. The
breaking of the points of contact between the top and subsoil is undoubtedly the
main reason for the efficiency of cultivation, but it is also to be remembered that
such stirring helps to dry the top soil very thoroughly, and as has been explained
a layer of dry soil of itself is a very effective check upon surface evaporation.
That the stirring or cultivation of the topsoil
really does diminish evaporation of water from the soil has been shown by numerous
investigations. In 1868, Nessler found that during six weeks of an ordinary German
summer a stirred soil lost 510 grams of water per square foot, while the adjoining
compacted soil lost 1680 grams,--a saving due to cultivation of nearly 60 per cent.
Wagner, testing the correctness of Nessler's work, found, in 1874, that cultivation
reduced the evaporation a little more than 60 per cent; Johnson, in 1878, confirmed
the truth of the principle on American soils, and Levi Stockbridge, working about
the same time, also on American soils, found that cultivation diminished evaporation
on a clay soil about 23 per cent, on a sandy loam 55 per cent, and on a heavy loam
nearly 13 per cent. All the early work done on this subject was done under humid
conditions, and it is only in recent years that confirmation of this important principle
has been obtained for the soils of the dry-farm region. Fortier, working under California
conditions, determined that cultivation reduced the evaporation from the soil surface
over 55 per cent. At the Utah Station similar experiments have shown that the saving
of soil-moisture by cultivation was 63 per cent for a clay soil, 34 per cent for
a coarse sand, and 13 per cent for a clay loam. Further, practical experience has
demonstrated time and time again that in cultivation the dry-farmer has a powerful
means of preventing evaporation from agricultural soils.
Closely connected with cultivation is the practice
of scattering straw or other litter over the ground. Such artificial mulches are
very effective in reducing evaporation. Ebermayer found that by spreading straw on
the land, the evaporation was reduced 22 per cent; Wagner found under similar conditions
a saving of 38 per cent, and these results have been confirmed by many other investigators.
On the modern dry-farms, which are large in area, the artificial mulching of soils
cannot become a very extensive practice, yet it is well to bear the principle in
mind. The practice of harvesting dry-farm grain with the header and plowing under
the high stubble in the fall is a phase of cultivation for water conservation that
deserves special notice. The straw, thus incorporated into the soil, decomposes quite
readily in spite of the popular notion to the contrary, and makes the soil more porous,
and, therefore, more effectively worked for the prevention of evaporation. When this
practice is continued for considerable periods, the topsoil becomes rich in organic
matter, which assists in retarding evaporation, besides increasing the fertility
of the land. When straw cannot be fed to advantage, as is yet the case on many of
the western dry-farms, it would be better to scatter it over the land than to burn
it, as is often done. Anything that covers the ground or loosens the topsoil prevents
in a measure the evaporation of the water stored in lower soil depths for the use
of crops.
Depth of cultivation
The all-important practice for the dry-farmer
who is entering upon the growing season is cultivation. The soil must be covered
continually with a deep layer of dry loose soil, which because of its looseness and
dryness makes evaporation difficult. A leading question in connection with cultivation
is the depth to which the soil should be stirred for the best results. Many of the
early students of the subject found that a soil mulch only one half inch in depth
was effective in retaining a large part of the soil-moisture which noncultivated
soils would lose by evaporation. Soils differ greatly in the rate of evaporation
from their surfaces. Some form a natural mulch when dried, which prevents further
water loss. Others form only a thin hard crust, below which lies an active evaporating
surface of wet soil. Soils which dry out readily and crumble on top into a natural
mulch should be cultivated deeply, for a shallow cultivation does not extend beyond
the naturally formed mulch. In fact, on certain calcareous soils, the surfaces of
which dry out quickly and form a good protection against evaporation, shallow cultivations
often cause a greater evaporation by disturbing the almost perfect natural mulch.
Clay or sand soils, which do not so well form a natural mulch, will respond much
better to shallow cultivations. In general, however, the deeper the cultivation,
the more effective it is in reducing evaporation. Fortier, in the experiments in
California to which allusion has already been made, showed the greater value of deep
cultivation. During a period of fifteen days, beginning immediately after an irrigation,
the soil which had not been mulched lost by evaporation nearly one fourth of the
total amount of water that had been added. A mulch 4 inches deep saved about 72 per
cent of the evaporation; a mulch 8 inches deep saved about 88 per cent, and a mulch
10 inches deep stopped evaporation almost wholly. It is a most serious mistake for
the dry-farmer, who attempts cultivation for soil-moisture conservation, to fail
to get the best results simply to save a few cents per acre in added labor.
When to cultivate or till
It has already been shown that the rate of evaporation
is greater from a wet than from a dry surface. It follows, therefore, that the critical
time for preventing evaporation is when the soil is wettest. After the soil is tolerably
dry, a very large portion of the soil-moisture has been lost, which possibly might
have been saved by earlier cultivation. The truth of this statement is well shown
by experiments conducted by the Utah Station. In one case on a soil well filled with
water, during a three weeks' period, nearly one half of the total loss occurred the
first, while only one fifth fell on the third week. Of the amount lost during the
first week, over 60 per cent occurred during the first three days. Cultivation should,
therefore, be practiced as soon as possible after conditions favorable for evaporation
have been established. This means, first, that in early spring, just as soon as the
land is dry enough to be worked without causing puddling, the soil should be deeply
and thoroughly stirred. Spring plowing, done as early as possible, is an excellent
practice for forming a mulch against evaporation. Even when the land has been fall-plowed,
spring plowing is very beneficial, though on fall-plowed land the disk harrow is
usually used in early spring, and if it is set at rather a sharp angle, and properly
weighted, so that it cuts deeply into the ground, it is practically as effective
as spring plowing. The chief danger to the dry-farmer is that he will permit the
early spring days to slip by until, when at last he begins spring cultivation, a
large portion of the stored soil-water has been evaporated. It may be said that deep
fall plowing, by permitting the moisture to sink quickly into the lower layers of
soil, makes it possible to get upon the ground earlier in the spring. In fact, unplowed
land cannot be cultivated as early as that which has gone through the winter in a
plowed condition
If the land carries a fall-sown crop, early spring
cultivation is doubly important. As soon as the plants are well up in spring the
land should be gone over thoroughly several times if necessary, with an iron tooth
harrow, the teeth of which are set to slant backward in order not to tear up the
plants. The loose earth mulch thus formed is very effective in conserving moisture;
and the few plants torn up are more than paid for by the increased water supply for
the remaining plants. The wise dry-fanner cultivates his land, whether fallow or
cropped, as early as possible in the spring.
Following the first spring plowing, disking,
or cultivation, must come more cultivation. Soon after the spring plowing, the land
should be disked and. then harrowed. Every device should be used to secure the formation
of a layer of loose drying soil over the land surface. The season's crop will depend
largely upon the effectiveness of this spring treatment.
As the season advances, three causes combine
to permit the evaporation of soil-moisture.
First, there is a natural tendency, under the
somewhat moist conditions of spring, for the soil to settle compactly and thus to
restore the numerous capillary connections with the lower soil layers through which
water escapes. Careful watch should therefore be kept upon the soil surface, and
whenever the mulch is not loose, the disk or harrow should be run over the land.
Secondly, every rain of spring or summer tends
to establish connections with the store of moisture in the soil. In fact, late spring
and summer rains are often a disadvantage on dry-farms, which by cultural treatment
have been made to contain a large store of moisture. It has been shown repeatedly
that light rains draw moisture very quickly from soil layers many feet below the
surface. The rainless summer is not feared by the dry-farmer whose soils are fertile
and rich in moisture. It is imperative that at the very earliest moment after a spring
or summer rain the topsoil be well stirred to prevent evaporation. It thus happens
that in sections of frequent summer rains, as in the Great Plains area, the farmer
has to harrow his land many times in succession, but the increased crop yields invariably
justify the added expenditure of effort.
Thirdly, on the summer-fallowed ground weeds
start vigorously in the spring and draw upon the soil-moisture, if allowed to grow,
fully as heavily as a crop of wheat or corn. The dry-farmer must not allow a weed
upon his land. Cultivation must he so continuous as to make weeds an impossibility.
The belief that the elements added to the soil by weeds offset the loss of soil-moisture
is wholly erroneous. The growth of weeds on a fallow dry-farm is more dangerous than
the packed uncared-for topsoil. Many implements have been devised for the easy killing
of weeds, but none appear to be better than the plow and the disk which are found
on every farm. (See Chapter XV.)
When crops are growing on the land, thorough
summer cultivation is somewhat more difficult, but must be practiced for the greatest
certainty of crop yields. Potatoes, corn, and similar crops may be cultivated with
comparative ease, by the use of ordinary cultivators. With wheat and the other small
grains, generally, the damage done to the crop by harrowing late in the season is
too great, and reliance is therefore placed on the shading power of the plants to
prevent undue evaporation. However, until the wheat and other grains are ten to twelve
inches high, it is perfectly safe to harrow them. The teeth should be set backward
to diminish the tearing up of the plants, and the implement weighted enough to break
the soil crust thoroughly. This practice has been fully tried out over the larger
part of the dry-farm territory and found satisfactory.
So vitally important is a permanent soil mulch
for the conservation for plant use of the water stored in the soil that many attempts
have been made to devise means for the effective cultivation of land on which small
grains and grasses are growing. In many places plants have been grown in rows so
far apart that a man with a hoe could pass between them. Scofield has described this
method as practiced successfully in Tunis. Campbell and others in America have proposed
that a drill hole be closed every three feet to form a path wide enough for a horse
to travel in and to pull a large spring tooth cultivator' with teeth so spaced as
to strike between the rows of wheat. It is yet doubtful whether, under average conditions,
such careful cultivation, at least of grain crops, is justified by the returns. Under
conditions of high aridity, or where the store of soil-moisture is low, such treatment
frequently stands between crop success and failure, and it is not unlikely that methods
will be devised which will permit of the cheap and rapid cultivation between the
rows of growing wheat. Meanwhile, the dry-farmer must always remember that the margin
under which he works is small, and that his success depends upon the degree to which
he prevents small wastes.

Dry-farm potatoes, Rosebud Co., Montana, 1909. Yield, 282 bushels
per acre.
The conservation of soil-moisture depends upon
the vigorous, unremitting, continuous stirring of the topsoil. Cultivation! cultivation!
and more cultivation! must be the war-cry of the dry-farmer who battles against the
water thieves of an arid climate.