4.5 Article

Spatiotemporal Pattern Analysis of China's Cities Based on High-Resolution Imagery from 2000 to 2015

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijgi8050241

Keywords

urban area; urban expansion; spatiotemporal pattern analysis; high-resolution imagery; China

Funding

  1. National key R & D plan on strategic international scientific and technological innovation cooperation special project [2016YFE0202300]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61671332, 41771452, 41401513, 41771454]
  3. Natural Science Fund of Hubei Province in China [2018CFA007]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Public-interest Scientific Institution [7771803]
  5. Beijing Key Laboratory of Urban Spatial Information Engineering [2018202]

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The urbanization level in China has increased rapidly since beginning of the 21st century, and the monitoring and analysis of urban expansion has become a popular topic in geoscience applications. However, problems, such as inconsistent concepts and extraction standards, low precision, and poor comparability, existing in urban monitoring may lead to wrong conclusions. This study selects 337 cities at the prefecture level and above in China as research subjects and uses high-resolution images and geographic information data in a semi-automatic extraction method to identify urban areas in 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015. City size distribution patterns, urban expansion regional characteristics, and expansion types are analyzed. Results show that Chinese cities maintained a high-speed growth trend from 2000 to 2015, with the total area increasing by 115.79%. The overall scale of a city continues to expand, and the system becomes increasingly complex. The urban system is more balanced than the ideal Zipf distribution, but it also exhibited different characteristics in 2005. Urban areas are mostly concentrated in the eastern and central regions, and the difference between the east and the west is considerable. However, cities in the western region continuously expand. Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, and Guangzhou are the four largest cities in China. Approximately 73.30% of the cities are expanding in an extended manner; the urban form tends to be scattered, and land use efficiency is low. The new urban areas mainly come from cultivated land and ecological land.

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