Abstract

The alpine grassland on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau covers an area of about 1/3 of China’s total grassland area and plays a crucial role in regulating grassland ecological functions. Both environmental changes and irrational use of the grassland can result in severe grassland degradation in some areas of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. However, the magnitude and patterns of the physical and anthropogenic factors in driving grassland variation over northern Tibet remain debatable, and the interactive influences among those factors are still unclear. In this study, we employed a geographical detector model to quantify the primary and interactive impacts of both the physical factors (precipitation, temperature, sunshine duration, soil type, elevation, slope, and aspect) and the anthropogenic factors (population density, road density, residential density, grazing density, per capita GDP, and land use type) on vegetation variation from 2000 to 2015 in northern Tibet. Our results show that the vegetation index in northern Tibet significantly decreased from 2000 to 2015. Overall, the stability of vegetation types was sorted as follows: the alpine scrub > the alpine steppe > the alpine meadow. The physical factors, rather than the anthropogenic factors, have been the primary driving factors for vegetation dynamics in northern Tibet. Specifically, meteorological factors best explained the alpine meadow and alpine steppe variation. Precipitation was the key factor that influenced the alpine meadow variation, whereas temperature was the key factor that contributed to the alpine steppe variation. The anthropogenic factors, such as population density, grazing density and per capita GDP, influenced the alpine scrub variation most. The influence of population density is highly similar to that of grazing density, which may provide convenient access to simplify the study of the anthropogenic activities in the Tibet plateau. The interactions between the driving factors had larger effects on vegetation than any single factor. In the alpine meadow, the interaction between precipitation and temperature can explain 44.6% of the vegetation variation. In the alpine scrub, the interaction between temperature and GDP was the highest, accounting for 27.5% of vegetation variation. For the alpine steppe, the interaction between soil type and population density can explain 29.4% of the vegetation variation. The highest value of vegetation degradation occurred in the range of 448–469 mm rainfall in the alpine meadow, 0.61–1.23 people/km2 in the alpine scrub and –0.83–0.15 °C in the alpine steppe, respectively. These findings could contribute to a better understanding of degradation prevention and sustainable development of the alpine grassland ecosystem in northern Tibet.

Highlights

  • As the main terrestrial ecosystem in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, grassland ecosystems are vulnerable to external disturbances and sensitive to environmental changes [1]

  • Based on the NDVI time series, this study explored the issue of vegetation variation on the alpine grassland ecosystem

  • Our study clearly showed a significant decreasing trend of vegetation index across northern Tibet during the period of 2000–2015

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Summary

Introduction

As the main terrestrial ecosystem in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, grassland ecosystems are vulnerable to external disturbances and sensitive to environmental changes [1]. Grassland ecosystems in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau have faced different degrees of degradation [2]. Both physical and anthropogenic factors (e.g., climate, soil type, topography, population, grazing density and land use [3,4,5,6,7,8]) are considered major driving forces of vegetation variation. Precipitation and temperature have been reported as the main factors affecting variations in grassland vegetation cover in the Qinghai-Tibet plateau [16,17,18]. Other studies have indicated that physical factors, such as soil types, solar radiation and elevation, play important roles in vegetation cover change. The combined effects of physical and anthropogenic factors on vegetation change have not been assessed integrally and interactively

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