Abstract

Irrigation contributes significantly to boosting crop yield and ensuring food security. However, in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei (BTH) region, unsustainable irrigation practices have led to serious outcomes on freshwater resources. Balancing irrigation with crop productivity in this region, currently facing complex challenge, requires a comprehensive understanding of its spatial pattern and thus to seeking for potential optimization of current crop structures. In this study, we employed the concept of water footprint (WFP) to assess the spatial-temporal patterns of water footprint for maize in BTH region at the county level for the years 2005, 2010, 2015, and 2020, untangled the relative impacts on WFP from climate attributes and harvest area structures. Our results showed significant regional heterogeneities in both blue water requirement and green water requirement, ranging from 64.6 mm to 290.7 mm. Yearly anomalies of climate attributes and maize harvest jointly influenced water footprints, with the highest value of 1.06 × 1011 m3 occurring in the year 2015. The green water footprints, linked to precipitation, dominated the total water footprint compared to the blue water footprint associated with irrigation. Additionally, we observed an increasing influence of maize harvest area on the temporal changes in water footprints, with these changes becoming more concentrated in the east-central region over time. Our findings underscore the respective contributions of annual climate attribute changes and harvest area variations at the county level, highlighting regions where urgent interventions are required to enhance the sustainability of water usage for agriculture.

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