Abstract

Land use/cover and vegetation patterns are influenced by many ecological factors. However, the effect of various factors on different classification systems and different levels of the same system is unclear. We conducted a redundancy analysis with 10 landscape metrics and ecological factors in four periods (1986–2005/2007, 1991–2005/2007, 1996–2005/2007, 2001–2005/2007) to explore their effects on the land use/cover system, vegetation group and vegetation type, and formation and subformation levels of the vegetation classification system in the Jing-Jin-Ji region. Soil, temperature and precipitation from 1986–2005, 1991–2005, and 2001–2005 were the important causal factors, and anthropogenic disturbance and atmospheric factors in 1996–2005 were causal factors at the land use/cover level. The total explained variance from 1996–2005 and 2001–2005 was higher than that from 1986–2005 and 1991–2005 at the land use/cover level. Causal factors and the variance explained by causal factors at the vegetation group, vegetation type, and formation and subformation levels were similar but different in the land use/cover system. Geography, soil and anthropogenic disturbance were the most important causal factors at the three vegetation levels, and the total explained variance from 2001–2007 was higher than that from 1986–2007, 1991–2007, and 1996–2007 at the three vegetation levels. In environmental research, natural resource management and urban or rural planning, geographic factors should be considered at the vegetation group, vegetation type and formation and subformation levels while atmospheric and temperature factors should be considered at the land use/cover level.

Highlights

  • Vegetation is an important component of ecosystems that can provide various service functions for human beings

  • Vegetation classification mainly focuses on the vegetation itself; types of vegetation in different classification levels must be taken into account in environmental research, natural resource management and urban or rural planning [1]

  • Geography was an important impact factor for the vegetation pattern at the three vegetation classification levels during four periods (1986–2007, 1991–2007, 1996–2007, 2001–2007), and geography could much better explain the pattern at the three vegetation classifications than land use/cover during four periods (1986–2005, 1991–2005, 1996–2005, 2001–2005) (Tables 1–4)

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Summary

Introduction

Vegetation is an important component of ecosystems that can provide various service functions for human beings. The impact of vegetation and land use/cover change on climate, ecosystem processes, biogeochemical cycles and biodiversity is a major driver of global environmental change [3,5,6]. Both natural and human-induced changes in vegetation and land use/cover are in turn affected by climate, ecosystem processes, biogeochemical cycles and biodiversity [7]. Understanding the relationship between vegetation, land use/cover in these classifications, and ecological factors can quantitatively reveal their interactions, explore the main factors leading to vegetation and land use/cover change, and predict the impact of climate change on them [9,10], which provide important information for scientific resource management and decision-making for better human activities [4]

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