Quantifying trade-offs of land multifunctionality evaluated by set pair
analysis in ecologically vulnerable areas of northwestern China:
Implications for sustainable land use
Abstract
Abstract: Land systems in drylands have been experiencing increasing
conflicts among different land functions due to ecological vulnerability
and growing demands. The improvement of one function is often at the
cost of other functions, which causes trade-offs of functions.
Understanding land multifunctionality and its trade-offs are
prerequisites to alleviate land use conflicts and achieve land
sustainability. But research often cannot well address the fuzziness and
uncertainty within assessments, and neglect the nonlinear feature when
quantifying the trade-offs. Taking the Heihe River Basin (HRB), a
typical arid ecologically vulnerable area in China, as the study area,
we applied the set pair analysis (SPA) to develop a novel framework for
assessing land multifunctionality at a fine scale from the
production-living-ecological angle. We then utilized the constraint line
fitted with segmented quantile regression to identify the trade-offs
among land functions and understand the bidirectional interaction
between land systems. The results showed that the overall land
multifunctionality in HRB showed an upward trend during 2000-2015, and
especially the production and living functions had a larger magnitude.
We used the coupling coordination degree to comprehensively indicate the
interaction and found that the degree was high in the south and low in
the north, which was mainly controlled by ecological function. The
effects of different drivers on land functions showed nonlinear
characteristics, and thresholds existed for some influencing factors.
Our research provides reliable and detailed information to coordinated
the development of land systems, which is helpful for sustainable land
use and territorial spatial planning.