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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2024, Vol. 35 ›› Issue (6): 1661-1670.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.202406.023

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Delineation of water ecological restoration zoning from a multi-dimensional perspective: A case study in Hechi, a typical karst region

GAO Mengwen1, HU Yecui1,2*, LIU Xinwei3, LIANG Mengyin3, KONG Fanjie3, BAI Yuping1   

  1. 1School of Land Science and Technology, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China;
    2Key Laboratory of Land Consolidation and Rehabilitation, Ministry of Natural Resources, Beijing 100035, China;
    3Land Consolidation and Rehabilitation Center, Ministry of Natural Resources, Beijing 100035, China
  • Received:2023-11-30 Accepted:2024-04-23 Online:2024-06-18 Published:2024-12-18

Abstract: Water ecological restoration zoning, which involves articulating goals for restoring water ecosystems upwards and guiding the spatial layout of restoration projects downwards, is key to achieving systematic restoration of water resource elements. There are many challenges in water ecological restoration zoning, including disparate hierarchical systems, incomplete indicators, and vague boundaries. With Guangxi Hechi, a karst ecologically fragile region, as a case, we developed a multidimensional zoning system framework based on “watershed natural unit-dominant ecological function-ecological stress risk”. The first-level zoning employed river systems and geomorphic types as indicators and delineated the sub-watershed unit as the boundary. The second-level zoning adopted a “top-down” division method to clarify the goal of water ecological restoration based on watershed natural geography and select three indicators (water conservation, biodiversity, and landscape cultural services) for evaluation. We used the K-means clustering method to identify dominant ecological functions in spatial units, with the sub-watershed unit demarcating second-level zoning boundaries. The third-level zoning was the specific implementation unit for ecological restoration projects. We used three indicators (soil erosion, flooding risk, and human interference) to characterize water ecosystem risk from external coercion, and defined the third-level zoning. We delineated 11 primary water ecological zones, four secondary zones, and three tertiary zones. Synthesizing tertiary zoning results accounted for spatial differentiation characteristics of watershed natural geography, dominant ecological functions, and ecological coercion risks, and combining sub-watershed and township administrative units determined zoning boundaries, water ecological restoration zoning was comprehensively classified into five categories and 32 sub-ecological zones. Corresponding ecological restoration strategies were proposed based on zoning and classification.

Key words: territorial spatial planning, ecological restoration zoning, K-means clustering, water ecological restoration, karst region