International Soil and Water Conservation Research (Sep 2022)

The quality attribute of watershed ecosystem is more important than the landscape attribute in controlling erosion of red soil in southern China

  • Qing Zhu,
  • Xi Guo,
  • Jiaxin Guo,
  • Jun Wu,
  • Yingcong Ye,
  • Wenbo Cai,
  • Shiyu Liu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
pp. 507 – 517

Abstract

Read online

Landscape and quality attributes are major ecosystem characteristics closely associated with soil conservation service (SCS). However, the intrinsic mechanisms by which these two attributes influence SCS are still unclear. Therefore, this study quantitatively analyzed the landscape pattern, ecological quality, and SCS in the Lianshui River watershed (a typical soil and water loss area of red soil in southern China) and its sub-watersheds in 2019. The boosted regression tree model was used to explore the influence of 15 factors (i.e., landscape and quality attributes) on SCS at the sub-watershed scale. According to the results, compared with the landscape attribute, the quality attribute of the watershed ecosystem could better explain the spatial heterogeneity of SCS across 66 sub-watersheds. The overall degree of influence of five quality factors on SCS reached 57.81%, with the highest being the normalized differential build-up and bare soil index (NDBSI), at 25.11%. Among 10 landscape factors, aggregation had the greatest influence on SCS, at 28.64%. The relationships between key influencing factors and SCS were non-monotonic and non-linear, with threshold effects. For example, NDBSI values of 0.18–0.41 had a positive influence on SCS, while NDBSI values of 0.41–0.65 had a negative influence on SCS. The findings broaden our understanding of the response of SCS to changes in landscape and quality attributes at the sub-watershed scale, and could offer comprehensive support for soil erosion management in the watershed ecosystem.

Keywords