Ecological Indicators (Aug 2024)

Identifying the contribution and spatial effects of land use conversion on ecosystem health in Chongqing: A multi-scenario simulation perspective

  • Weijie Li,
  • Jinwen Kang,
  • Yong Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 165
p. 112232

Abstract

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Land-use changes dominated by high-intensity human activities have seriously threatened regional ecosystem health (EH) and will continue to increase in the future, especially in mountainous cities. Therefore, there is a need to systematically assess the contribution and spatial effects of future land use conversion on EH from a multi-scenario simulation perspective, which is essential for ecological conservation and management. For this purpose, taking Chongqing as an example, this study assessed the static distribution and dynamic evolution of EH over historical periods (2000–2020) and future multi-scenarios in 2030 using the vigor-organization-resilience-ecosystem services balance (VORSB) framework and patch-level land use simulation (PLUS) model, then analyzed the influence of land use conversion on EH and identified sensitive areas under multiple scenarios based on the contribution index and ecological sensitivity index. The results showed that Chongqing ecosystems were generally at a moderate healthy level during 2000–2020, with an increasing trend in EH level, with high-EH located in the eastern mountainous areas, while low-EH clustered in the western urban core and its peripheral areas. From 2020 to 2030, the EH level was improved by about 0.21% under the ecological protection scenario due to the transformation from farmland to forestland, which has the largest positive contribution of 0.111. In contrast, the EH level under the natural development and economic development scenarios declined by 1.95% and 3.07%, especially in the metropolitan developed circle, which was significantly related to the occupation of farmland resources by urban land, with negative contribution of −0.103 and −0.189, respectively. In the future, these regions should strictly control the urban expansion scale and strengthen high-quality farmland protection to achieve the balance of ecological protection and economic development. The findings will provide scientific guidance for the regional ecosystem conservation, land use planning, and urban sustainable development of mountainous cities.

Keywords