Relative importance of climate change and human activities for vegetation changes on China's silk road economic belt over multiple timescales

被引:108
|
作者
Qi, Xiangzhen [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Jia, Junhe [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Liu, Huiyu [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Lin, Zhenshan [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Nanjing Normal Univ, State Key Lab Cultivat Base Geog Environm Evolut, Nanjing 210023, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[2] Nanjing Normal Univ, Minist Educ, Key Lab Virtual Geog Environm, Nanjing 210023, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[3] Nanjing Normal Univ, Jiangsu Ctr Collaborat Innovat Geog Informat Reso, Nanjing 210023, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[4] Nanjing Normal Univ, Coll Geog Sci, Nanjing 210023, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Multiple timescale analysis; Climate change; Human activities; Spatial heterogeneity; Sustainable regional socioeconomic development; EMPIRICAL MODE DECOMPOSITION; QINGHAI-TIBET PLATEAU; 3-RIVER SOURCE REGION; DRIVING FORCES; QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT; DYNAMICS; NDVI; RESPONSES; ROLES; DEGRADATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.catena.2019.04.027
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Ecological issues of China's Silk Road Economic Belt are receiving increasing attention. It is necessary to monitor vegetation changes in the Belt and explore their relationship with climate changes and human activities to ensure sustainable regional socioeconomic development. However, there is no adequate understanding of the relative importance of climate changes and human activities on vegetation over multiple timescales. In this study, ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD) and residual trends (RESTREND) methods were used to establish the relative importance over multiple timescales. (1) The dominant timescales of vegetation changes have obvious spatial heterogeneity, which was affected by vegetation types and elevation. Grassland in high altitude areas, needleleaf forest, and shrubland were characterized by 3-year oscillations. Low-altitude areas mainly covered by cropland were characterized by long-term trends. (2) Climate types mainly affected the relationship between vegetation and climate changes at short timescales, while vegetation types, elevation, landforms affected the relationship over each timescale. Over the 3-year timescale, temperature and precipitation had a negative and a positive relationship respectively with vegetation changes in semi-arid and arid regions, but a positive relationship and a negative relationship respectively in semi-humid and humid regions. As the timescale widened, temperature had a positive relationship in all areas, except for needleleaf forest, and precipitation had a positive relationship except in high-latitude areas dominated by alpine meadow and in karst areas. (3) Vegetation changes were dominated by human activities at 3- and 6-year timescales but by climate changes in the long-term trend. However, when considering the total effects of these three timescales, climate changes dominated the overall changes of vegetation, while human activities also played an important role in vegetation reduction and insignificant changes. Vegetation changes were influenced by cross-scale climate changes. This study showed that multiple timescale analysis could deepen our understanding of the roles of climate and human activities on vegetation changes.
引用
收藏
页码:224 / 237
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Influences of Climate Change and Human Activities on NDVI Changes in China
    Liu, Yu
    Tian, Jiyang
    Liu, Ronghua
    Ding, Liuqian
    REMOTE SENSING, 2021, 13 (21)
  • [22] China's Silk Road Economic Belt Initiative: Network and Influence Formation in Central Asia
    Reeves, Jeffrey
    JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY CHINA, 2018, 27 (112) : 502 - 518
  • [23] Silk Road Economic Belt as China's Eurasian Dream: Common Identity or Common Fear?
    Yildirim, Nilgun Elikucuk
    BILIG, 2019, (91) : 235 - 254
  • [24] Silk Road Economic Belt: Can Old BITs Fulfil China's New Initiative?
    Huang, Jie
    JOURNAL OF WORLD TRADE, 2016, 50 (04) : 733 - 754
  • [25] THE NECESSITY AND FEASIBILITY OF DOCKING CHINA'S 'THE SILK ROAD ECONOMIC BELT' WITH RUSSIA'S 'THE CROSSING- EURASIAN DEVELOPMENT BELT'
    Xu, Haiping
    Zhang, Ye
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON TRANSFORMATIONS AND INNOVATIONS IN MANAGEMENT (ICTIM 2017), 2017, 37 : 241 - 251
  • [26] Impacts of Climate Change and Human Activities on Vegetation Restoration in Typical Grasslands of China
    Zhang L.-X.
    Yue X.
    Zhou D.-C.
    Fan J.-W.
    Li Y.-Z.
    Huanjing Kexue/Environmental Science, 2023, 44 (05): : 2694 - 2703
  • [27] Climate change enhances the positive contribution of human activities to vegetation restoration in China
    Liu, Min
    Bai, Xiaoyong
    Tan, Qiu
    Luo, Guangjie
    Zhao, Cuiwei
    Wu, Luhua
    Luo, Xuling
    Ran, Chen
    Zhang, Sirui
    GEOCARTO INTERNATIONAL, 2022, 37 (26) : 13479 - 13499
  • [28] Impacts of climate change and human activities on vegetation cover in hilly southern China
    Wang, Jing
    Wang, Kelin
    Zhang, Mingyang
    Zhang, Chunhua
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2015, 81 : 451 - 461
  • [29] Assessing the relative role of climate and human activities on vegetation cover changes in the up-down stream of Danjiangkou, China
    Liu, Hai
    Liu, Feng
    Yuan, Hongmeng
    Zheng, Liang
    Zhang, Yuan
    JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY, 2022, 15 (01) : 180 - 195
  • [30] Impact of Climate Change and Human Activities on the Ecological Sensitivity of the Yangtze River Economic Belt
    An, Min
    Wei, Ya-Qian
    He, Wei-Jun
    Huang, Jin
    Fang, Xue
    Song, Meng-Fei
    Wang, Bei
    Huanjing Kexue/Environmental Science, 2024, 45 (10): : 5833 - 5843