4.7 Article

Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Net Primary Productivity in China's Urban Lands during 1982-2015

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13030400

Keywords

NPP; urban expansion; long time series; importance; contribution

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA19090112]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFA0603002]
  3. National Key Scientific and Technological Infrastructure project Earth System Science Numerical Simulator Facility (EarthLab)

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This paper evaluates the impact of China's rapid urbanization on NPP, showing a decrease in NPP in urban areas but an increase in NPP in buffer zones, primarily influenced by temperature and sunshine duration. Increasing temperature promotes NPP growth, while sunshine duration and vegetation loss contribute to NPP decline in urban agglomerations.
The rapid urbanization process has threatened the ecological environment. Net primary productivity (NPP) can effectively indicate vegetation growth status in an urban area. In this paper, we evaluated the change in NPP in China and China's urban lands and assessed the impact of temperature, precipitation, the sunshine duration, and vegetation loss due to urban expansion on NPP in China's three fast-growing urban agglomerations and their buffer zones (similar to 5-20 km). The results indicated that the NPP in China exhibited an increasing trend. In contrast, the NPP in China's urban lands showed a decreasing trend. However, after 1997, China's increasing trend in NPP slowed (from 9.59 Tg C/yr to 8.71 Tg C/yr), while the decreasing trend in NPP in China's urban lands weakened. Moreover, we found that the NPP in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei urban agglomeration (BTHUA), the Yangtze River Delta urban agglomeration (YRDUA), and the Pearl River Delta urban agglomeration (PRDUA) showed a decreasing trend. The NPP in the BTHUA showed an increasing trend in the buffer zones, which was positively affected by temperature and sunshine duration. Additionally, nonsignificant vegetation loss could promote the increase of NPP. In the YRDUA, the increasing temperature was the main factor that promoted the increase of NPP. The effect of temperature on NPP could almost offset the inhibition of vegetation reduction on the increase of NPP as the buffer zone expanded. In PRDUA, sunshine duration and vegetation loss were the main factors decreasing NPP. Our results will support future urban NPP prediction and government policymaking.

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