Abstract

Net primary production (NPP) supplies matter, energy, and services to facilitate the sustainable development of human society and ecosystem. The response mechanism of NPP to land use and climate changes is essential for food security and biodiversity conservation but lacks a comprehensive understanding, especially in arid and semi‐arid regions. To this end, taking the middle‐reaches of the Heihe River Basin (MHRB) as an example, we uncovered the NPP responses to land use and climate changes by integrating multisource data (e.g., MOD17A3 NPP, land use, temperature, and precipitation) and multiple methods. The results showed that (a) land use intensity (LUI) increased, and climate warming and wetting promoted NPP. From 2000 to 2014, the LUI, temperature, and precipitation of MHRB increased by 1.46, 0.58°C, and 15.76 mm, respectively, resulting in an increase of 14.62 gC/m2 in annual average NPP. (b) The conversion of low‐yield cropland to forest and grassland increased NPP. Although the widespread conversion of unused land and grassland to cropland boosted both LUI and NPP, it was not conducive to ecosystem sustainability and stability due to huge water consumption and human‐appropriated NPP. Urban sprawl occupied cropland, forest, and grassland and reduced NPP. (c) Increase in temperature and precipitation generally improved NPP. The temperature decreasing <1.2°C also promoted the NPP of hardy vegetation due to the simultaneous precipitation increase. However, warming‐induced water stress compromised the NPP in arid sparse grassland and deserts. Cropland had greater NPP and NPP increase than natural vegetation due to the irrigation, fertilizers, and other artificial inputs it received. The decrease in both temperature and precipitation generally reduced NPP, but the NPP in the well‐protection or less‐disturbance areas still increased slightly.

Highlights

  • Net primary production (NPP) is the net carbon sequestration of terrestrial plants, namely the difference between photosynthesis production and respiration consumption (Matsushita & Tamura, 2002; Milesi, Elvidge, Nemani, & Running, 2003; Potter, Klooster, & Genovese, 2012; Running et al, 2004)

  • Previous research confirmed that climate change plays the major role in NPP variations in the arid and semi‐arid regions (Lai et al, 2018; Li, Wang et al, 2018)

  • We analyzed the spatiotemporal changes of NPP, land use, and climatic factors in the middle‐reaches of the Heihe River Basin (MHRB) from 2000 to 2014 and revealed the spatial heterogeneity of NPP responses to land use and climatic changes

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Net primary production (NPP) is the net carbon sequestration of terrestrial plants, namely the difference between photosynthesis production and respiration consumption (Matsushita & Tamura, 2002; Milesi, Elvidge, Nemani, & Running, 2003; Potter, Klooster, & Genovese, 2012; Running et al, 2004). In order to promote the sustainable development of ecosystems, we should comprehensively study the coupling response mechanism of NPP to land use and climate changes on the basis of a more accurate estimation of NPP. Land use and cli‐ mate changes affect the supply and distribution of water resources, resulting in a change in the ecosystem state of MHRB (Song, Liu, Arowolo, Zhang, & Xu, 2018a; Tan & Zheng, 2017). The climatic factors used in this study include the annual average temperature and annual precipitation of MHRB in 2000 and 2014, which were the ground observation data from 20 meteorological stations (http://data.cma.cn/) (Figure 1) We interpolated these ob‐ servations into 1 km raster data based on the thin plate smoothing spline package developed by the Australian National University (ANUSPLIN) (https://fennerschool.anu.edu.au/research/products/ anusplin) (Liu, Song, & Deng, 2017)

| METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
| CONCLUSION

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