Ecological Indicators (May 2024)
Spatiotemporal variations and driving forces analysis of ecosystem water conservation in coastal areas of China
Abstract
China's coastal zones, characterized by their ecological vulnerability and significant economic growth, demand effective water conservation management. Such management is pivotal not only for safeguarding water resources but also for ensuring ecological stability and promoting sustainable socio-economic development. In this study, based on the water balance model, the spatiotemporal dynamics of water conservation in the ecosystems of China's coastal areas from 2001 to 2021 were characterized by three dimensions: overall, zonal, and raster. The results show that: ① the distribution pattern of ecosystem water conservation in China's coastal areas from 2001 to 2021 is “high in the south and low in the north”, with a total amount of 117.726 billion m3/a, with the Pearl River Delta and Southwest Coastal Areas as the main high-value areas, and the overall water conservation and its capacity show a “ decreasing-rising-decreasing” pattern. The overall water conservation and its capacity show a fluctuating trend of “falling-rising-falling”. Additionally, water conservation capacity varied significantly among different vegetation types and across marine-terrestrial gradients, with the highest capacity recorded in evergreen coniferous forests and areas situated 140 km from the coastline. ②From 2001 to 2021, the water conservation capacity of China's coastal ecosystems exhibited significant temporal patterns and spatial differentiation along the marine-terrestrial gradient. The research suggests that these patterns of change are intricately linked with the stages of regional development strategies and ecological construction within these coastal zones. ③In China's coastal areas, a mere 11.63 % of the rasters showed significant changes in water conservation, dominated by highly significant and significant increases, mainly in the Southeast Coastal Area, the Pearl River Delta and Southwest Coastal Areas, and the Bohai Bay Coastal Area. This included areas such as the Yangtze River Delta silty coastal plain area, the Bohai Bay silty coastal plain area, the sandy silt coastal hilly terrace area of western Guangdong and Guinan, and other China coastal protection forest system construction projects. ④ Water conservation function within China's coastal ecosystems demonstrates a profound interconnection with both natural and socio-economic determinants. Natural elements such as elevation, slope, and precipitation positively correlate with water conservation metrics. Conversely, evapotranspiration and temperature are inversely related to conservation outcomes. In terms of social factors, water conservation has a significant negative correlation with GDP density and population density, with the highest negative correlation with the GDP2 density.