Attribution of climate and human activities to vegetation change in China using machine learning techniques

被引:124
作者
Shi, Yu [1 ,2 ]
Jin, Ning [3 ]
Ma, Xuanlong [4 ]
Wu, Bingyan [1 ]
He, Qinsi [5 ]
Yue, Chao [2 ]
Yu, Qiang [2 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Northwest A&F Univ, Coll Nat Resources & Environm, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, Peoples R China
[2] Northwest A&F Univ, Inst Soil & Water Conservat, State Key Lab Soil Eros & Dryland Farming Loess P, Yangling 712100, Shaanxi, Peoples R China
[3] Shanxi Inst Energy, Dept Resources & Environm, Jinzhong 030600, Peoples R China
[4] Lanzhou Univ, Coll Earth & Environm Sci, Lanzhou 730000, Peoples R China
[5] Univ Technol Sydney, Sch Life Sci, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia
[6] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Resources & Environm, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China
关键词
Climate change; Human activity; Climatic zone; Vegetation greening; Attribution analysis; CARBON-DIOXIDE; LOESS PLATEAU; IMPACTS; PROGRAM; TRENDS; REGION; RESTORATION; VARIABILITY; GREENNESS; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.1016/j.agrformet.2020.108146
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
A series of policies and laws have been implemented to address climate change impacts in China since the 1980s. One of the most notable policies is ecological restoration engineering. However, there are many environmental factors that affect vegetation in the ecological restoration engineering zones. The relationships among different factors cannot be explained well by traditional statistical methods due to the existence of hidden non-linear features. Moreover, it is difficult to adopt threshold methods to accurately define vegetation areas fully, or to quantitatively analyze and assess the effects of climate factors and human activities on vegetation changes. The objective of this study was to determine vegetation area and distribution using Landsat TM/ETM/OLI images combined with a support vector machine (SVM) classification model. We analyzed the dynamic characteristics of vegetation area and greenness (NDVI, Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) in China's ecological restoration engineering zones from 1990 to 2015. Based on random forest regression (RFR) with a residual analysis method, the contributions of meteorological factors and human activities to vegetation greenness changes were quantitatively evaluated. Vegetation area and NDVI changed significantly in the study areas, increasing by more than 50% and 40%, respectively, from 1990 to 2015. Temperature, sunshine hours, and precipitation impacted vegetation greenness, which caused NDVI fluctuations in specific years. However, the NDVI increase was difficult to explain fully with meteorological factors. Using cross-validation, we predicted about 80% of the observed NDVI variation occurring from 1984 to 1994. Nine meteorological factors were related to vegetation growth, of which the average temperature, minimum temperature, maximum temperature, and average relative humidity were most critical. The combined effect of the nine climatic factors contributed less to NDVI increase than human activities. Human activity was the most important factor associated with NDVI increase, with contributions of more than 100% in most study areas. Human activities derived from national or local policies had large impacts on vegetation changes. The methods and results of this study can help to understand vegetation changes observed in ecological zones and provide guidance for evaluating ecological restoration policies.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Impacts of climate change and anthropogenic activities on vegetation change: Evidence from typical areas in China [J].
Zheng, Kaiyuan ;
Tan, Linshan ;
Sun, Yanwei ;
Wu, Yanjuan ;
Duan, Zheng ;
Xu, Yu ;
Gao, Chao .
ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2021, 126
[22]   Quantitative Contributions of Climate Change and Human Activities to Vegetation Changes in the Upper White Nile River [J].
Ma, Bo ;
Wang, Shanshan ;
Mupenzi, Christophe ;
Li, Haoran ;
Ma, Jianye ;
Li, Zhanbin .
REMOTE SENSING, 2021, 13 (18)
[23]   ATTRIBUTION ANALYSIS OF CLIMATE CHANGE AND HUMAN ACTIVITIES TO WATER VOLUME VARIATION IN LARGE LAKES [J].
Lin, Yi ;
Gao, Chen ;
Li, Xin ;
Zhang, Tinghui ;
Yu, Jie ;
Rong, Yu ;
Li, Lang ;
Zhou, Xuefei ;
Cai, Jianqing ;
Sneeuw, Nico .
GEOSPATIAL WEEK 2023, VOL. 48-1, 2023, :443-450
[24]   Impacts of climate change and anthropogenic activities on the normalized difference vegetation index of desertified areas in northern China [J].
Meng, Nan ;
Wang, Nai'ang ;
Cheng, Hongyi ;
Liu, Xiao ;
Niu, Zhenmin .
JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHICAL SCIENCES, 2023, 33 (03) :483-507
[25]   Attribution of climate change and human activities to spatiotemporal changes of ecological service value in Yunnan Province of China [J].
Liu, Shuiqing ;
Liu, Jianwei ;
Shang, Songhao .
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2024, 55
[26]   Detection and Attribution of Changes in Terrestrial Water Storage across China: Climate Change versus Vegetation Greening [J].
Kong, Rui ;
Zhang, Zengxin ;
Zhang, Ying ;
Wang, Yiming ;
Peng, Zhenhua ;
Chen, Xi ;
Xu, Chong-Yu .
REMOTE SENSING, 2023, 15 (12)
[27]   Attribution of Runoff Reduction in the Juma River Basin to Climate Variation, Direct Human Intervention, and Land Use Change [J].
Bu, Jingyi ;
Lu, Chunxia ;
Niu, Jun ;
Gao, Yanchun .
WATER, 2018, 10 (12)
[28]   Assessing the effects of climate and human activity on vegetation change in Northern China [J].
Chen, Meizhu ;
Xue, Yayong ;
Xue, Yibo ;
Peng, Jie ;
Guo, Jiawei ;
Liang, Haibin .
ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2024, 247
[29]   Climate change and human activities: a case study in Xinjiang, China [J].
Wu, Zhuoting ;
Zhang, Hongjun ;
Krause, Crystal M. ;
Cobb, Neil S. .
CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2010, 99 (3-4) :457-472
[30]   Climate change vulnerability assessment of dryland farmers and factors Identification using machine learning techniques [J].
Kandasamy, Sathya Uma Lakshmi ;
Singh, Piyush Kumar ;
Swain, Dillip Kumar .
LOCAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 27 (07) :824-846