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Urbanization-driven changes in land-climate dynamics : A case study of Haihe River Basin, China

Authors :
Li, Zhouyuan
Xu, Yanjie
Sun, Yingbao
Wu, Mengfan
Zhao, Bin
Li, Zhouyuan
Xu, Yanjie
Sun, Yingbao
Wu, Mengfan
Zhao, Bin
Source :
ISSN: 2072-4292
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Urbanization changes the land surface environment, which alters the regional climate system. In this study, we took the Haihe River Basin in China as a case study area, as it is highly populated and experienced rapid urbanization from 2000-2015. We investigated how land use and cover change (LUCC) was driven by urban land development affects land-climate dynamics. From 2000-2015, we collected data from the land use and cover database, the remote sensing database of the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) series, and the meteorological database to process and generate regional datasets for LUCC maps. We organized data by years aligned with the selected indicators of land surface, normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), albedo, and land surface temperature (LST), as well as of regional climate, cloud water content (CWC), and precipitation (P). The assembled datasets were processed to perform statistical analysis and conduct structural equation modelling (SEM). Based on eco-climatology principles and the biophysical process in the land-climate dynamics, we made assumptions on how the indicators connected to each other. Moreover, we testified and quantified them in SEM. LUCC results found that from 2000-2015 the urban area proportion increased by 214% (2.20-6.91%), while the agricultural land decreased by 7.2% (53.05-49.25%) and the forest increased by 4.3% (10.02-10.45%), respectively. This demonstrated how cropland intensification and afforestation happened in the urbanizing basin. SEM results showed that the forest had both positive and negative effects on the regional hydrological cycle. The agricultural land, grassland, and shrub had indirect effects on the P via different biophysical functions of LST. The overall effects of urbanization on regional precipitation was positive (pathway correlation coefficient = 0.25). The interpretation of how urbanization drives LUCC and alters regional climate were herein discussed in different aspects of

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 2072-4292
Notes :
application/pdf, Remote Sensing 12 (2020) 17, ISSN: 2072-4292, ISSN: 2072-4292, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1202774229
Document Type :
Electronic Resource