The impact of stress factors from three land-use patterns on riparian
zones degradation located within mega-reservoirs and around dams in
China
Abstract
There is currently a lack of evidence surrounding changes in the health
of riparian zones under different land-use patterns within
mega-reservoirs and around dams. Scientific evidence for the
quantitative effects of stress indicators is vague and varies
significantly among reservoirs and dams worldwide. In this study, we
used a field-based approach to evaluate riparian health
changes—influenced by pressure indicators—across 274 transects from
three land-use areas (rural, rural–urban transitional, and urban) in
the Three Gorges Dam Reservoir (TGDR) in China during 2019. Multivariate
statistical techniques were applied to test for riparian zone changes
under these variant land-use patterns. Our results showed that 13
pressure indicators significantly influenced 27 health indicators
(including parameters for habitat, plant cover, regeneration, erosion,
and exotics) of the riparian zones from the three land-use areas
differently. Our results also showed that parameters for plant cover,
erosion, and exotics were major contributors within the selected
riparian health indicators, whereas land-use designs, farming systems,
and pollutant activity variables were the pressure indicators with the
strongest impact. Pearson correlation (with r ranging from -0.731
to 0.989) showed that urban transects exhibited the strongest
comparative interaction, whereas rural–urban transitional transects
formed the weakest association. Furthermore, the agglomerative
hierarchical cluster analysis revealed similarities between rural and
rural–urban transitional sites while confirming substantial
dissimilarity in urban locations. These comprehensive and relevant
results provide essential information for reservoir administrators to
implement functional changes suited to TGDR land-use scenarios.