Abstract

Vegetation greening steered by land use management in the Chinese Loess Plateau has been widely reported, however studies that quantitatively assessing and explicitly linking the anthropogenic forcing on vegetation greening and browning are scarce. Here in this study, we calculate the increment and rate of change of fractional vegetation cover (FVC) from 1998 to 2018 in the Loess Plateau, and compare the results with changing rainfall, soil types, and Gross Domestic Product (GDP), to detail a systematic assessment of the role of the climate-vegetation-human nexus. We have observed that nearly 80% of the study area has undergone greening, and noticed that rainfall was not the main driver of rapid vegetation change, instead of human land use management such as, irrigation along the Yellow River, snowmelt-runoff irrigation, and irrigation from reservoirs formed by check dams contributed the most for the increased FVC in the Chinese Loess Plateau. Concurrently, rapid vegetation browning is almost fully driven by urban expansion. Our findings show that GDP growth promotes both browning and greening, indicative of sustainable development in the Loess plateau region. These contrasting trends reveal that the relationship between human activities and greening is very complex.

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