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Temporal and spatial changes and their driving forces of vegetation cover in Horqin Sandy Land in recent 40 years.

LYU Jia-xin1, LI Xiu-fen1,3, ZHENG Xiao2,3,4*, NIE Zhe1, LIU Si-qiang1   

  1. (1College of Agriculture, Shenyang Agricultural University, Shenyang 110866, China; 2CAS  Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Management, Institute of Applied Ecology, Shenyang 110016, China; 3Qingyuan Forest CERN, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110016, China; 4Daqinggou Ecological Station, Institute of Applied Ecology, Shenyang 110016, China).
  • Online:2020-05-10 Published:2020-05-10

Abstract: Horqin Sandy Land is a key area for the project of desertification prevention and control in China. In recent years, ecological engineering construction, human activities and vegetation growth in this area have been affected by climate change to some extent. Understandingdynamic change of regional vegetation can provide scientific basis for the comprehensive control of the sandy land and reasonable construction of ecological engineering. Consequently, the spatialtemporal variations and their driving factors of NDVI in Horqin Sandy Land were analyzed based on the dataset of NOAA-NDVI and MODIS-NDVI from 1981 to 2015, as well as meteorological and socioeconomic data. The results showed that from 1981 to 2015, NDVI showed a fluctuating increase trend (with a growth rate of 0.00114 a-1). Spatially, areas with increasing NDVI(accounting for 68.8% area) were mainly located in the southeast margin and part of the central region, while NDVI of the northwest margin of the study area was decreasing. The change process of NDVI in desertification areas of different degrees was first decreased (1981-2000) and then increased (2001-2015), indicating that vegetation destroyed in the early stage was restored in the later stage. Results of driving force analysis showed that precipitation and temperature were the factors driving NDVI changes in some areas of Horqin Sandy Land. Population change and the implementation of ecological engineering drove the spatial-temporal change of vegetation in this region. However, economic development was not a major factor driving vegetation change in this area.

Key words: biomass., improvement effect, physico-chemical properties, organic matter, iron tailing