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- Title
Attributing the impacts of ecological engineering and climate change on carbon uptake in Northeastern China.
- Authors
Li, Huidong; Gao, Wanjing; Liu, Yage; Yuan, Fenghui; Wu, Minchao; Meng, Lin
- Abstract
Context: In the past decades, several ecological engineering (eco-engineering) programs have been conducted in China, leading to a significant increase in regional carbon sink. However, the contribution of different eco-engineering programs to carbon uptake is still not clear, as the location of different programs is difficult to identify, and their impacts are concurrent with climate change. Objectives: We aim to detect the location of eco-engineering programs and attribute the impacts of eco-engineering and climate change on vegetation dynamics and carbon uptake in Northeastern China during 2000–2020. Methods: We developed a new framework to detect the location of eco-engineering programs by combining a temporal pattern analysis method and Markov model, and to attribute the impacts of eco-engineering and climate change on vegetation greenness and carbon uptake by combining a neighbor contrast method within a sliding window and trend analysis on the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and gross primary production (GPP). Results: We identified four main forestry eco-engineering programs: croplands to forest (CtoF), grasslands to forest (GtoF), savannas to forest (StoF), and natural forest conservation (NFC) programs, whose areas accounted for 2.11%, 1.89%, 3.41%, and 1.72% of the total study area, respectively. Both eco-engineering and climate change contributed to the increase in greenness and carbon uptake. Compared to climate change effect, eco-engineering increased NDVI and GPP by 121% and 21.43% on average, respectively. Specifically, the eco-engineering-induced increases in GPP were 54.1%, 9.46%, 8.13%, and 24.20% for CtoF, GtoF, StoF, and NFC, respectively. Conclusions: These findings highlight the important and direct contribution of eco-engineering on vegetation greening with positive effects on carbon sequestration at a fine scale, providing an important implication for eco-engineering planning and management towards a carbon-neutral future.
- Subjects
CHINA; ECOLOGICAL engineering; NORMALIZED difference vegetation index; ECOLOGICAL impact; CLIMATE change; VEGETATION greenness; GREEN technology; MARKOV processes; NEAR field communication
- Publication
Landscape Ecology, 2023, Vol 38, Issue 12, p3945
- ISSN
0921-2973
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10980-023-01679-x