Relative contribution of climate change and human activities to vegetation degradation and restoration in North Xinjiang, China
Hongfei Yang A B C D , Liang Yao A , Youbao Wang A and Jianlong Li CA College of Life Sciences, Anhui Normal University, 1 East Beijing Road, Wuhu 241000, Anhui, P.R. China.
B Collaborative Innovation Centre of Recovery and Reconstruction of Degraded Ecosystem in Wanjiang City Belt, Anhui Province, P.R. China.
C School of Life Science, Nanjing University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, P.R. China.
D Corresponding author. Email: hongfeiy@ahnu.edu.cn
The Rangeland Journal 39(3) 289-302 https://doi.org/10.1071/RJ16069
Submitted: 5 December 2015 Accepted: 3 June 2017 Published: 23 June 2017
Abstract
Climate change and human activities are the two primary driving factors in the vegetation degradation process, and the assessment of their relative roles in vegetation degradation is important to understand the driving mechanisms of vegetation degradation. In this study, net primary productivity (NPP) was selected as an indicator to distinguish the relative roles of climate change and human activities in vegetation degradation and restoration from 2001 to 2010 in North Xinjiang, China. The potential NPP and the human appropriation of NPP were served as the indicator of the effects of climate change and human activities in vegetation degradation and restoration. The results showed that human activities were the dominant factor that induced vegetation degradation, accounts for 55% (153 720 km2) of the total degradation, whereas 25% (69 336 km2) of the total degradation resulted from climate change; the combination of human activities and climate change was the cause in 20% (55 429 km2) of the total degradation. In contrast, 61% (66 927 km2) of the total vegetation restoration was dominated by human activities and 29% (31 553 km2) was caused by climate change; the areas of vegetation restoration caused by the combination of human activities and climate change were 10 551 km2 (10%). The relative roles of the two factors possessed great spatial heterogeneity in five vegetation types. Climate dominated degradation expansion and human activities dominated vegetation restoration in forest. Both the degradation and restoration were dominated by human activities in grassland. In desert, degradation was dominated by human activities and vegetation restoration by climate. In cropland and crop/natural vegetation mosaic, degradation was dominated by both human activities and climate change and restoration was dominated by human activities. These results demonstrated that human activities played a demonstrably positive role in vegetation restoration, and ecological restoration projects were effective on mitigating vegetation degradation and also promoting restoration in the southern areas of North Xinjiang.
Additional keywords: driving factors, dynamic, net primary productivity (NPP), vegetation status.
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