4.3 Article

On Landscape Patterns in Typical Mountainous Counties Middle Reaches of the Yangtze River in China

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18084000

Keywords

plantations; natural forests; landscape patterns; mountainous areas; Yangtze River

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFC0505501]
  2. Research Project of Chongqing Forestry Bureau [2020-10]

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The study compared the landscape patterns of plantations (PT) and natural forests (NF) in three typical silvicultural counties, revealing significant differences in size and fragmentation. Human activities have interfered with natural forests, highlighting the need for afforestation strategies closer to nature. PT areas are increasing as an ecological protection strategy, but their landscape patterns are distinctly different from NF, potentially impacting ecological material energy flow. The findings have implications for other regions in China and the world where natural forests have been heavily disturbed.
The landscape patterns of plantations (PT) are the results of human disturbances on local vegetation, and in turn, differ greatly from natural forests (NF), since the patterns strongly influence the natural circulation of material and energy. There is a need to understand the differences of landscape patterns between PT and NF, to establish a near natural afforestation strategy. This study chose three typical silvicultural counties in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River as the research areas and compared the landscape patterns of NF and PT, with other land use types (grassland, GL; cropland, CL; shrubland, SL; orchard, OR; built-up land, BUL; bare land, BL; and water bodies, WB). The results revealed that the areas of PT accounted for 7.67%, 12.05%, and 18.97% of three counties, bigger than GL, OC, BUL, BL, and WB, as one of main land use types. The landscape patterns of PT (mean patch size between 2.06 to 6.05 ha) were more fragmented than NF (mean patch size between 5.83 to 53.91 ha). NF areas increased along the relative altitude gradient, from 0 to 2500 m, while PT areas peaked from 100-1000 m. The higher the altitude, the more typical the zonal distribution of PT, the more aggregated the NF. NF had significant negative correlations with BL, BUL, CL, PT, GL, and OC, which suggest that human activities had seriously interfered with NF. Although PT as an ecological protection strategy was increasing, the landscape patterns of PT were obviously different from NF. This may affect the material energy flow in the ecological environment. The results in the present study have great implications in the other regions in China and the relevant parts of the world where natural forests were heavily disturbed.

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