Abstract

Rapid urbanization and intensification of human activities increases the risk of disturbance of ecological systems via multiple sources, with consequences for regional ecological security and health. Landscape ecological risk assessment (LERA) is an effective way to identify and allocate risk to resources. We used the north and south Qinling Mountain area as a case study to analyze the spatial heterogeneity of landscape ecological risk using a potential- connectedness-resilience three-dimensional (PCR 3D) framework based on an integrated and dynamic risk assessment concept from adaptive cycle theory. We explored factors driving the risks with a spatial model GeoDetector. The results show that the comprehensive landscape ecological risk was north–south polarized and dominated by low and moderate risk levels (90.13% of total risk) across the whole study area. The high-risk area was centered on the Weihe plain north of the Qinling Mountains (NQL), while low-risk areas accounted for 86.87% of the total area and were prevalent across the south of the study area. The areas with high potential and connectedness risks were centered in the Xi’an–Xianyang urban agglomeration and those with high-resilience risk were in the upper reaches of the Hanjiang River. The vast majority of the area to the south of the Qinling Mountains (SQL) is at low risk. In terms of driving forces, population density and vegetation coverage (NDVI) are the primary factors affecting landscape ecological risk. Our findings suggest that anthropogenic activity is the primary cause of landscape ecological risks in the study area and regional socioeconomic exploitation and environmental conservation need to be rebalanced to achieve sustainability for the social ecosystem. The PCR 3D LERA framework employed in this study can be used to inform landscape ecological health and security and to optimize socioeconomic progress at regional scales.

Highlights

  • Landscape ecological risk is a negative consequence of the interaction between landscape characteristics and external threats when a landscape is exposed to one or more risk sources [1,2]

  • The high-risk area is mainly concentrated in the Weihe River plain in the north of the Qinling Mountains (NQL) and a small fraction of high-risk area is on the Hanjiang River coast, while the low-risk areas are distributed in the south of the Qinling Mountains (SQL) and add up to 86.87% of the total area

  • Landscape ecological risk assessment (LERA) has been developed by combining the landscape pattern and ecological processes with the external threats, a concept derived from traditional landscape ecological risk assessment which emphasizes the comprehensive impact of multiple risk sources on the socio-ecological system, but with disregard for the dynamic change in coupled ecosystems and ecological risks

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Summary

Introduction

Landscape ecological risk is a negative consequence of the interaction between landscape characteristics and external threats when a landscape is exposed to one or more risk sources [1,2]. A landscape ecological pattern index algorithm based on landscape disturbance and vulnerability [14,15], a source-sink theory created from landscape impacts on ecological processes [16,17,18], and an ecosystem service value-based method [4,19] have allowed the spatial characteristics of landscape ecological risk to be examined in a static view This ignores the impact-response dynamics and changes in landscapes, and the risk adaptation under external drivers which can follow highly complex evolutionary processes depending on the social-ecological system examined [12,20]

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