Owing to irregular distribution of salt in the soil or to irregularity of the
soil structure (figure 2), the
leaching efficiency (EL) can be different from unity. Soils with a low leaching efficiency are difficult to reclaim. In the
Tagus delta,
Portugal, the leaching efficiency of the dense
clay soil was found as low as 0.10 to 0.15. The soil could not be developed for
intensive agriculture and was used for rearing of bulls in coarse natural
pasture. The
clay soil in the
Nile delta,
Egypt, on the other hand has a much better leaching efficiency of 0.7 to 0.8. In figure 3, leaching curves are shown for different leaching efficiencies, as assumed in the
leaching model SaltMod with data from the Mashtul pilot area. The observed values of
soil salinity correspond best to a leaching efficiency of about 0.75. The figure illustrates the calibration process of leaching efficiency, which parameter is difficult to measure directly. The clay soil in the river delta near
Chiclayo, Peru, also proved to be quite low An overview of leaching efficiencies in different soil types is given in the next table • ) Also called
smectite,
vertisol,
montmorillonite, heavy clay, swelling clay, poorly structured clay ==Leaching requirement==