4.6 Article

Spatial expansion effects on urban ecosystem services supply-demand mismatching in Guanzhong Plain Urban Agglomeration of China

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHICAL SCIENCES
Volume 32, Issue 5, Pages 806-828

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11442-022-1973-x

Keywords

urban spatial expansion; ES supply and demand; FLUS; expert-based LUCC matrix; Guanzhong Plain Urban Agglomeration

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41871187]
  2. Natural Science Basic Research Plan in Shaanxi Province of China [2020JQ415]

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Global urbanization has led to drastic land use change, interfering the ecosystem services supply-demand balance, threatening human well-being. This study assessed the effects of urban spatial expansion on ecosystem services supply-demand mismatch in the Guanzhong Plain Urban Agglomeration using the Future Land Use Simulation model and expert-based Land-Use and Land-Cover Change matrix. The results revealed that urban expansion resulted in declining ecosystem services and increasing supply-demand mismatch, posing a threat to the sustainability of ecosystems.
Global urbanization has led to drastic land use change, interfering the ecosystem services (ES) supply-demand balance, in turn threatening the well-being of humans. However, existing studies mainly stranded at the historical and current analysis, and the effects of urban spatial expansion on the relationship between ES supply and demand in the future are less clear, in particular at an urban agglomeration scale. This study was constructed with a framework of assessing the effects of urban spatial expansion on ES supply-demand mismatching under different future scenarios in the Guanzhong Plain Urban Agglomeration (GPUA) by using the Future Land Use Simulation (FLUS) model and expert-based Land-Use and Land-Cover Change (LUCC) matrix. The results showed that: (1) Urban expansion is significant in the natural development (ND) scenario, mainly manifesting the great transfer of dry land to construction land. (2) The gap between total ES supply and demand is narrowed from 2000 to 2030 and the mismatch between ES supply and demand is mainly reflected in the spatial distribution pattern in the GPUA. The ES budgets were in high surplus in Northern Qinling Mountains and northeast mountain areas, while they were in severe deficit in urban center areas. The budgets deficit under the ND scenario in 2030 is the most severe. (3) The gradient differences of ES budgets of the GPUA between urban centers and suburbs increase from 2000 to 2030 under two scenarios. The deficit region expands largest under ND scenario. The findings revealed that ES declining and supply-demand mismatching were triggered by the drastic land-use change driven by rapid urban expansion. The expansion has brought about an increasing material demand and growing industries, threatening the sustainability of ecosystems. Scenarios setting could contribute to coordinating the relationship between future urban development and ecological protection, and the policy strategies proposed in the study could inform ecological management and urban planning in the regions facing the similar urbanization situation.

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