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Supply and demand dynamics of hydrologic ecosystem services in the rapidly urbanizing Taihu Lake Basin of China.

Authors :
Tao, Yu
Li, Zhaobi
Sun, Xiao
Qiu, Jiangxiao
Pueppke, Steven G.
Ou, Weixin
Guo, Jie
Tao, Qin
Wang, Fei
Source :
Applied Geography. Feb2023, Vol. 151, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Although it is challenging to integrate supply and demand to comprehensively understand urbanization effects on ecosystem services, this knowledge is essential, especially in rapidly urbanizing areas. A spatially explicit approach was developed here to synthesize supply and demand dynamics of the two most important hydrologic services in the rapidly urbanizing Taihu Lake Basin (TLB) of eastern China. The supply of water purification (WP S) and flood mitigation (FM S) were measured as nitrogen removal and runoff retention, respectively. Whereas the demand for water purification (WP D) was quantified as the difference between total and permitted nitrogen loading based on relevant water quality standards, the demand for flood mitigation (FM D) was estimated as the vulnerability to potential flood damage, including economic losses and causalities. We found a spatial mismatch where high WP S and FM S occurred in mountainous areas while high WP D and FM D concentrated in urban and agricultural areas across the basin. WP S and WP D decreased by 10% and 20%, respectively during 2000–2015, due mainly to loss of croplands to urban expansion. This was also the main cause of decreased FM S by 7% but increased FM D by 67%, which underscored the importance of conserving croplands in rapidly urbanizing regions of the TLB. Overall, land use composition had strong associations with WP D (r 2 ≥ 0.57) and FM S (r 2 ≥ 0.38) at the sub-basin scale, while the configuration of multiple land uses, such as urban sprawl, cropland fragmentation, and riparian buffers were crucial in influencing WP S. In comparison, FM D was most sensitive to urban expansion (r 2 = 0.74), economic development (r 2 = 0.81), and population growth (r 2 = 0.93). These findings provide new insights into sustainable land management for coordinating supply of and demand for hydrologic services in the TLB and other urbanizing watersheds of the world. • Supply and demand dynamics of hydrologic services are quantified in an urbanizing watershed. • Spatial mismatches between supply of and demand for hydrologic services are revealed. • Urbanization and land use have strong effects on hydrologic services at the sub-basin scale. • Land management measures are proposed to coordinate hydrologic service supply and demand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01436228
Volume :
151
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Applied Geography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161305069
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2022.102853