Spatiotemporal Evolution of Landscape Ecological Risk Based on Geomorphological Regionalization during 1980–2017: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province, China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Area and Data Sources
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Data Sources
3. Research Methods
3.1. The Spatial Display Approach
3.2. Landscape Index Method
3.3. Spatial Autocorrelation Method
3.4. Standard Deviational Ellipse and Risk Gravity
4. Results
4.1. Spatial and Temporal Differentiation of Landscape Ecological Risk
4.2. Spatial Autocorrelation Analysis
4.3. Temporal Variation of Ecological Risk Based on Geomorphologic Regionalization
- (1)
- The Qinling Mountains (ranked sixth) and the Daba Mountains (ranked fifth) were always low-value areas of ecological risk. The degree of risk evolution of the Daba Mountains was more obvious than that of the Qinling Mountains. Mountainous areas with higher topographical relief greatly restrict farming behaviors while increasing the expansion cost of urban construction, which results in a low intensity of human disturbance. This scenario led to a high degree of dominance of the regional forest and grassland, forming a relatively closed and safe biological refuge, thus maintaining low ecological risk during the study period.
- (2)
- The internal spatial difference of ecological risk in the Loess Plateau (ranked fourth) was very obvious. The north of the Loess Plateau is the hilly and gully region with higher topographical relief. The disordered landscape structures and broken ecological corridors were formed in this region, resulting in a high level of ecological risk. The forest coverage of the southern part of the Loess Plateau is second only to that of the Qinba Mountains; thus, the ecological risk remained relatively low. Overall, the ecological risk of the Loess Plateau increased from 1980 to 2000, which may reflect the changes in land use types and spatial patterns in the context of agricultural farming and township construction. The rate of decline of ecological risk in the Loess Plateau ranked third in terms of the risk change from 2000 to 2017, which was related to the national policy of returning farmland to forests implemented in 1999. The ecological policy of China increased the area of forests and grassland, reduced the degree of separation of forests and grassland landscapes, greatly reducing the spread trend of ecological risk.
- (3)
- The sandstorm transition zone was located in the northwest of Shaanxi Province (ranked second), where natural vegetation is rare and wind erosion and desertification of soil are very serious. This condition led to a high concentration of unused land, high habitat fragility and high ecological risk. The ecological risk in this region tended to increase from 1980 to 2000. However, a large amount of unused land was converted into forest and grassland after the policy of returning farmland to forest was implemented and this policy enhanced the regional ability to resist sand erosion and effectively reduced the regional habitat sensitivity. The risk reduction rate in this region was the first in terms of the risk change in the corresponding period, with the risk decreasing by 3.22%.
- (4)
- The Han River basin (ranked third) and the Guanzhong Plain (ranked first) were always high-risk areas, but the rates of risk change are fourth and third, respectively. The Guanzhong Plain and Han River basin were the main urban construction areas and important irrigated agricultural areas. Urban construction land and farmland were the most typical man-made landscapes and their land use patterns and boundary fractal characteristics were more marked by human interference, affecting the evolution direction of the landscape pattern. In the early period of disturbance (1980–2000), urban construction land patches were abundant, forming fragmented and disordered landscape areas, which increased the ecological risk. In the later period of interference (2000–2017), the space of construction land expanded rapidly. The construction land with a large area gradually swallowed up the surrounding smaller construction land patches, or many small patches gradually merged to form larger construction land patches, which greatly enhanced the stability of the regional landscape and clearly reduced the ecological risk.
4.4. Spatial Evolution of Ecological Risk Based on Geomorphologic Regionalization
- (1)
- The areas where the risk gravity shifted to the southwest included the sandstorm transition zone and the Loess Plateau. Agricultural production, the policy of returning farmland to forests, and the development of mineral resources should be considered as key factors in the ecological risk changes. This region is important energy accumulation places for coal, oil resources in China. The ecological risk was higher under the influence of a fragile natural basement and excessive energy exploitation. With the transformation of energy structure, the petroleum exploitation in the west of Yulin city strengthened, while the traditional coal cities in the north were at a disadvantage during the industrial transformation, which directly affected the evolution direction of local landscape structure. In addition, as a result of the policy implementation of the three-north shelterbelt construction, a large amount of forest and grassland formed stable habitats in the northern area, which led to the southward shift of risk gravity.
- (2)
- The areas where the risk gravity shifted to the northeast included the Guanzhong Plain and the Qinling Mountains. Population expansion brought about by urban expansion and agricultural production should be a core factor in risk changes in the Guanzhong Plain. The risk changes in Qinling Mountains was related to the establishment of protected areas. The Wei River ran roughly from southwest to northeast, which was basically consistent with the direction of the risk gravity shift. The upper reaches of the Wei River have complicated topography, limited farming activities and urban expansion; thus, human activities in the Guanzhong Plain tended to expand to the lower reaches of the Wei River due to improved transportation during the study period. As the national central park, human disturbance acted on the northern and southern slopes of the Qinling Mountains to varying degrees. The northern Qinling Mountains faced a higher degree of human disturbance due to their proximity to the Guanzhong Plain [45], which caused the risk gravity of the Qinling Mountains to move northward.
- (3)
- The areas where the risk gravity shifted to the southeast included the Han River basin and the Daba Mountains. Urban expansion and agricultural production were also considered in risk changes of Han River basin and the risk changes in Daba Mountains were related to the policy of returning farmland to forests. During the research period, the construction land of Hanzhong tended to expand to the downstream regions of the Han River, which destroyed the integrity of the farmland patch. The urban progress of Ankang city was slower than that of Hanzhong city, but the risk increased due to urban expansion. This pattern shifted the risk gravity to the southeast. The increase in the large amounts of forest and grassland areas in the western part of the Daba Mountains further stabilized the ecological process, which significantly reduced the risk in the western part of the Daba Mountains and shifted the risk gravity to the southeast.
5. Discussion
5.1. Geomorphologic Features, Human Drivers, Pattern Change, Risk Response
- (1)
- The restricted type: Shenmu City is located in the typical loess hilly gully region with large topographic relief. Human activity was forced to separate because of the mixed terrain, which simultaneously formed a singular and repeated landscape patch. The farmland was located in terraces or gullies and most of the abandoned farmland was located in the high-slope area. A large amount of farmland and unused land was converted into grassland during the period of farmland regression, which greatly enhanced the dominance of grassland patches and the surrounding stable habitats, benefiting the restoration of regional habitats and effectively reducing ecological risk. In the ecological risk study of the Loess Plateau, Wang et al. believed that the ecological risk of the resettlement area increased first and then decreased from 1995 to 2015 [25], which is similar to the results of this study. However, Ren et al. concluded that the ecological risk on the Loess Plateau has generally increased and declined locally based on comprehensive risk models since 1990 [46]. In short, it is undeniable that the policy of returning farmland to forests has effectively reduced the severity of ecological risks in this region.
- (2)
- The beneficial type: As a typical plain city, the topography of Xi’an was less restrictive to human activities and formed diverse and complex landscape patches. The spatial pattern was dominated by farmland at the beginning of the period and changed to become co-dominated by farmland and construction land at the end of the period. Xi’an city mainly expanded to the southwest during the study period. Chang’an District in the south of Xi’an was dominated by “enclave” patches at the beginning of the period and was gradually “submerged” by spreading expansion. The occupation of farmland by construction land gradually evolved into a more stable large-scale landscape base, thereby increasing the stability of the regional landscape. In the study of the risk of plain cities, Shi et al. believes that the risk of the urban-rural junction is gradually decreasing due to the consolidation of building land patches [47], which is consistent with the characteristics of the ecological risk impact of urban expansion in Xi’an. At the same time, Wang et al. suggested that plain urban agglomerations have always had higher ecological risks due to severe human interference [27]. The risk change of plain cities is closely related to the degree of urban development. Human disturbance can influence the evolution direction of landscape patterns in the plain area, thus leading to an increase or decrease in ecological risk.
5.2. Risk Reduction from the Perspective of Geomorphological Regionalization
- (1)
- The Loess Plateau and sandstorm transition zone are ecologically fragile regions in China. In the process of farming and urban construction, the landscape layout and three-dimensional structure should be reasonably designed according to the original landform, precipitation condition and distribution of forests and rivers [13]. The naturalness of the basement edge of the ecosystem should be maintained while the fragmentation of the landscape should be reduced. The policy of returning farmland to forests should be further implemented, as this policy promotes the restoration of fragile habitats and reduces the sensitivity of regional habitats, thus slowing the spread of ecological risk.
- (2)
- The Guanzhong Plain and Han River basin were the main areas of urban concentration in Shaanxi Province. The terrain struggled to restrict the expansion of Xi’an and other plain cities; thus, the subjective initiative of people can be greatly developed. Efforts should be made to build the ecological space structure of urban agglomerations, and the ecological security pattern was constructed through the optimization and reorganization of the regional ecological matrix, patches and corridors based on the perspective of landscape ecology to effectively reduce ecological risk [52].
- (3)
- The Qinba Mountains are part of a national park and represent an ecological function restriction development zone in China. A new eco-environmental protection regulation on the Qinba Mountains was formulated for vegetation protection, biodiversity maintenance and construction constraints in 2019. Vegetation protection relies on the policy of returning farmland to forests. The expansion of forests and the improvement of connectivity are positive changes in forest landscapes [53], which helps to better exert water conservation and climate regulation. Wildlife habitat reserves have been set up to avoid severe disturbance of biological habitats by human activities. Construction constraints are mainly coping with spatial conflicts with local habitats arising from transportation corridors, rural settlements, and mineral resource development. Landscape management is implemented through corridor design, rural reconstruction, and mineral development governance, thereby reducing ecological risks.
5.3. Limitations of Study
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Landscape Disturbance Indexes | Calculation Method | Meaning |
---|---|---|
Landscape fragmentation index (Ci) | Ci refers to the process in which landscape types change from single, homogeneous, and continuous to complex, heterogeneous and discontinuous due to the interference of nature or human beings. The increase in Ci indicates a decrease in system stability and an aggravation of ecological risk. | |
Landscape isolation index (Ni) | Ni refers to the degree of separation of different patch numbers in landscape types. The increase in the Ni index indicates that the landscape is more scattered, the landscape distribution is more complex, and the fragmentation degree is higher. | |
Landscape dominant index (DOi) | DOi is an indicator used to measure the importance of patches in a landscape, which directly reflects the impact of this landscape type on landscape pattern. | |
Landscape disturbance index (Ei) | Ei reflects the disturbance degree of an ecosystem represented by different landscape types. |
Land Use Types | Grades of Fragility | Values of Fragility |
---|---|---|
Construction land | 1 | 0.0476 |
Forest | 2 | 0.0952 |
Grassland | 3 | 0.1429 |
Farmland | 4 | 0.1905 |
Waterbody | 5 | 0.2381 |
Unused land | 6 | 0.2857 |
Typical Regions | Year | Morphological Indicators | Ecological Risk | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PD | ED | FD | CONTAG | DIVISION | SHDI | |||
Shenmu City | 1980 | 0.6795 | 58.1240 | 1.1270 | 59.0654 | 0.9374 | 1.1314 | 0.1364 |
2017 | 0.6572 | 53.6429 | 1.1257 | 61.0700 | 0.8702 | 1.0774 | 0.1302 | |
Xi’an City | 1980 | 0.7944 | 23.5421 | 1.0529 | 59.3962 | 0.8702 | 1.0646 | 0.1129 |
2017 | 0.7459 | 24.9587 | 1.0593 | 60.3134 | 0.8270 | 1.1187 | 0.1044 |
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Liu, D.; Chen, H.; Zhang, H.; Geng, T.; Shi, Q. Spatiotemporal Evolution of Landscape Ecological Risk Based on Geomorphological Regionalization during 1980–2017: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province, China. Sustainability 2020, 12, 941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030941
Liu D, Chen H, Zhang H, Geng T, Shi Q. Spatiotemporal Evolution of Landscape Ecological Risk Based on Geomorphological Regionalization during 1980–2017: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province, China. Sustainability. 2020; 12(3):941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030941
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Di, Hai Chen, Hang Zhang, Tianwei Geng, and Qinqin Shi. 2020. "Spatiotemporal Evolution of Landscape Ecological Risk Based on Geomorphological Regionalization during 1980–2017: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province, China" Sustainability 12, no. 3: 941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030941
APA StyleLiu, D., Chen, H., Zhang, H., Geng, T., & Shi, Q. (2020). Spatiotemporal Evolution of Landscape Ecological Risk Based on Geomorphological Regionalization during 1980–2017: A Case Study of Shaanxi Province, China. Sustainability, 12(3), 941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12030941