Ecological Indicators (Oct 2023)
Human activities dominate a staged degradation pattern of coastal tidal wetlands in Jiangsu province, China
Abstract
The tidal wetlands in Jiangsu Province (JS) play a crucial role as a major blue carbon sink in the eastern coastal area of China. These wetlands also contribute significantly function to biodiversity and the provision of ecosystem services. However, due to the escalating impact of anthropogenic activities and climatic changes, the ecological scope, structure, and function of tidal wetlands have changed drastically. This study aims to depict the spatiotemporal dynamics of these wetlands and explore the driving forces behind these changes. Based on the Google Earth Engine (GEE) platform, we conducted a comprehensive analysis of all the available Landsat imagery (5096 images, 30-m spatial resolution) using the Continuous Change Detection and Classification (CCDC) algorithm. The outputs consist of annual land cover maps of JS coastal zone, from 1990 to 2020. Results indicate that the generated coastal maps generally exhibit an exceptionally high average accuracy (92.62%) and there were 2666.54 km2 of tidal wetlands (Spartina alterniflora: 240.86 km2, Suaeda salsa: 37.31 km2, Phragmites australis: 150.63 km2, intertidal flat: 2158.18 km2, supratidal barren flat: 79.53 km2) in 2020, amounting to a 23.43% decrease of the initial year 1990. The tidal wetlands landscape had a staged decline during 1990–2020, and the hydrological vegetation habitat was the area with the greatest variability. Over the past three decades, the losses of tidal wetlands amounted to 1,466.22 km2, partially offset by gains of 650.05 km2. The two most substantial sources of losses were intertidal flat and Suaeda salsa with the most significant ratio of loss to gain (4.80, 10.31, respectively). Generally, we categorized tidal wetlands degradation into three transformation processes: human activities, species invasion, and natural succession. Human activities, particularly the conversion of intertidal flat into aquafarm, dominated the entire degradation process. Meanwhile, in the main driving analysis, we discovered that 60% of these losses and gains were directly tied to human activities. The indirect driving process includes natural coastal movements, climate change, unobservable human activities, and their aggregate effects, which gradually assist tidal wetlands ecosystems to re-establish and recover. The annual coastal wetland maps and detailed information on the evolutionary patterns and the corresponding drivers are valuable for identifying blue carbon distribution and enhancing the ecological services of the coastal zone.