4.7 Article

Quantifying the effect of environmental drivers on water conservation variation in the eastern Loess Plateau, China

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Volume 125, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107493

Keywords

Water conservation; SWAT; Climate change; Land use; The Loess Plateau

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41801034, 41801007]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFF0305905]
  3. Open Research Fund of Key Laboratory of Tibetan Environmental Changes and Land Surface Processes, Chinese Academy of Sciences [TEL201801]

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The Loess Plateau, known for water shortages and soil erosion, faces challenges in maintaining regional ecological security. The study in the Zhanghe River Basin on the eastern Loess Plateau showed a slight decrease in water conservation, with greater conservation in northern areas with dense vegetation. Human activities were found to be the main factor contributing to the reduction in water conservation in recent decades.
The Loess Plateau is famous for its water shortages and soil erosion, quantitatively assessing the water conservation function is of great significance to maintain regional ecological security. Zhanghe River Basin with severe water conflicts in eastern Loess Plateau, was selected to investigate the variation characteristics of water conservation. The results showed that water conservation decreased slightly from 1960 to 2016, with a rate of 1.1 ? 108 m3/10a. The mean annual water conservation (MAWC) is 31.46 ? 108 m3, and accounted for 32% of the precipitation. The spatial pattern of water conservation and land use type were significantly correlated: More water resources ( 213 mm) were conserved in the north hilly region with high vegetation coverage, while water resources were less (<140 mm) conserved in the south cropland and construction land. Using the calibrated Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT), the contribution rates of climate change, land use, and other human activities (e.g. engineering measures, water consumption) on water conservation were quantitatively estimated through setting several different environmental scenarios. The research period (1974?2016) was divided into the baseline period (P0: 1974?1994), dramatically-increased period (P1: 1995?2005) and weakly-increased period (P2: 2006?2016). The attribution results indicated that other human activities were the dominant factor, and exerted greater effects on the increase of water conservation in the recent decades, with an increasing contribution from 82.88% in P1 to 122.16% in P2. Climate change was the secondary factor, and it increased water conservation in P1 but reduced it in P2, with the contribution from 18.01% to -15.45%. The contributions of climate change, land use/cover change (LUCC) and other human activities to water conservation reduction during P1-P2 were 32.53%, 1.67%, and 65.80%, respectively. In the recent decades, other human activities have become the most important factors on water conservation reduction, in which human water consumption contributed to 60.1%

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