Salinity Solution Saves Mango Crops in Brazil (Case Study)
Published on by Eric Valette, CEO and Co-Founder at AQUA4D in Case Studies
“You can see the plants are full of life, and are beautiful. Not to mention also that Aqua-4D also helps in other matters," said the grower. "There’s also been water savings, less clogging, more energy for the plant.”
In fact, Aqua-4D is truly a one-stop irrigation solution for simultaneously treating a whole variety of common problems. The same effect that leaches the salts away also keeps water flowing through pipes and drippers, and ensures the plant gets more of what it needs and less of what it doesn’t.
Read the complete Case Study in the link below.
Attached link
https://blog.aqua-4d.com/salinity-solution-mango-brazil/Media
Taxonomy
- Agriculture
- Basin Irrigation
- Drip Irrigation
- Sustainable Agriculture
- Water Efficiency
- Saline Water Irrigation
- Irrigation
- Irrigation and Drainage
- Precision irrigation
- Irrigation & Water Management
2 Comments
-
I wish I could find a new invention in this marketing video. From observing this video only I can see extremely poor soil lacking any humus. Microbial population is close to zero. Natures ingredients to begin building a healthy soil are not present. Sea salts or more correctly sea nutrients are all crops need. Best results achieved when nutrients are balanced. This means as close to the ancient ocean as possible. When rain water is added to brine arid soil nothing will grow. As soon as you add the growing engineers (bacteria, fungus, Archaea) the healing will begin. Reason for knowing without being there. The number one item on any real case study is its Brix level increase. The observational tell was the mangos. So small and not vibrant at all. Yield seems to be on the minimum rating. The farmer discovered by accident what nature has provided on purpose.
1 Comment reply
-
Usually the soil in Brazil is rich, different from other countries, in spite of the appearance.
-
-
FANTASTIC PROJECT, WILL NEED YOUR HELP IN OUR PROJECT IN WEST AFRICA, WE HAVE 2SQ MILES TO PLANT