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  2. Organic lawn management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_lawn_management

    Organic lawn management or organic turf management or organic land care or organic landscaping is the practice of establishing and caring for an athletic turf field or garden lawn and landscape using organic horticulture, without the use of manufactured inputs such as synthetic pesticides or artificial fertilizers.

  3. Irrigation management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation_management

    Irrigation water has a price by which the management costs must be covered. The following tariff (water charge) systems exist: [6] No tariff, the government assumes the costs; Tariff in labor hours, which holds mainly in communal types of management in traditional irrigation systems; Yearly area tariff, a fixed price per ha per year

  4. Drip irrigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drip_irrigation

    Drip irrigation systems distribute water through a network of valves, pipes, tubing, and emitters. Depending on how well designed, installed, maintained, and operated it is, a drip irrigation system can be more efficient than other types of irrigation systems, such as surface irrigation or sprinkler irrigation.

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  6. Subirrigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subirrigation

    Subirrigation also known as seepage irrigation, is a method of irrigation where water is delivered to the plant root zone. The excess may be collected for reuse. The excess may be collected for reuse.

  7. Irrigation sprinkler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation_sprinkler

    Center-pivot irrigation was invented in 1940 [3] by farmer Frank Zybach, who lived in Strasburg, Colorado. In the 1950s, Stout-Wyss Irrigation System, a firm based in Portland, Oregon, developed a rolling pipe type irrigation system for farms that has become the most popular type for farmers irrigating large fields.