Abstract

Landscape fragmentation is considered a serious threat to eco-environmental integrity and socioeconomic development. Although many studies have focused on landscape fragmentation resulting from agricultural production and urbanization, landscape fragmentation from the aspects of patterns, driving forces, and the policy perspective of ecosystems has rarely been investigated. Oases, as a unique landscape, face severe fragmentation in arid and semiarid regions. This study applied a combination of approaches, including remote sensing image interpretations, landscape fragmentation metrics, and community surveys, to analyze patterns and their driving forces, as well as the policy implications for future land consolidation, in the Hotan oasis of Northwest China from the space and time perspectives. Results show that the frequent occurrence of summer flood events changes the patch number, density, size, and splitting degree of oasis-desert ecotone vegetation. The socioeconomic factors including total population and irrigation area are more important driving forces on oasis landscape fragmentation, compared with natural factors such as temperature and precipitation. Rural expansion, road and canal system developments caused by population growth, and the rising number of households increase oasis landscape fragmentation. Rapid economic development, such as agricultural expansion and urbanization, has imposed the intensification of landscape fragmentation. Fragmentation reaches peak when agricultural development makes up 40-50% of study area. Rural residential reconstruction and farmland transfer policies facilitate the intensive utilization of land toward oasis fragmentation solutions, but many factors, such as landholders' household characteristics and living conditions, are partly responsible for the challenges in land consolidation. This study also demonstrates that intense human activities pose a great threat for land consolidation and sustainable development of oasis landscape.

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