Forests (Oct 2019)

Will Human-Induced Vegetation Regreening Continually Decrease Runoff in the Loess Plateau of China?

  • Yanzhong Li,
  • Dehua Mao,
  • Aiqing Feng,
  • Tayler Schillerberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f10100906
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. 906

Abstract

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China has become the largest contributing country to global vegetation regreening. However, the regreening pattern and subsequent impact on arid areas have not been comprehensively evaluated. Therefore, we selected the Loess Plateau, a representative arid region that has undergone evident vegetation restoration, to investigate the spatial patterns and temporal trends, as well as the drivers of vegetation change. This study primarily focused on 12 afforested watersheds during 2000−2018. Furthermore, both the impacts of vegetation regreening on runoff for the past two decades and the future projections were quantified based on the fraction of photosynthetically active radiation (fPAR), the Budyko model, and the global climate models (GCMs). fPAR for the last two decades indicates that vegetation in the Loess Plateau has experienced a continuous increasing trend during the growing season, primarily in response to the implementation of the Grain for Green Project (GFGP). Of the 12 watersheds, 9 experienced significant fPAR change with a change rate above 50%, and 11 exhibited a significant increase (p < 0.05) in runoff sensitivity to vegetation regreening, which indicates that vegetation regreening plays an increasingly important role in controlling runoff variation. The decline in runoff caused by vegetation regreening was particularly noticeable before 2011 or 2012; afterwards, runoff tended to vary with precipitation. In the future (2020−2049 and 2050−2099), decrease in runoff by regreening will be limited, as runoff is anticipated to decrease by 3.5% in 2020−2049 and 4.1% in 2050−2099 with a 20% increase in fPAR. These results indicate that runoff tends to be stable even with continuous vegetation regreening. While the reduction of runoff by regreening will be limited in the future, rapid human-induced vegetation regreening may aggravate water scarcity when flash droughts occur and may result in disasters in water-limited regions to the socio-economic stability and agriculture. Our study will provide an applicable theoretical foundation for water resources decision-making and ecological restoration.

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