Abstract
As an essential pathway for nature-based solutions, vegetation
restoration can effectively absorb carbon sequestration and mitigate
global warming. However, the excessive water consumption by vegetation
expansion may create potential water conflicts between natural
ecosystems and human systems, and even exacerbate local water shortages,
especially in water-limited dryland regions. By evaluating water
availability using multiple datasets, this study explored the vegetation
restoration potential and the allowable vegetation conversion in China’s
drylands under the constraint of water availability. We found that the
additional water resources available for vegetation restoration in
China’s drylands were 2.7 ± 11 mm (median ± SD) from 2003 to 2018 but it
decreased over the period (-1.15 mm yr-1). 45.0% of the drylands area
had water deficits, after considering existing vegetation and human
water consumption. Under current water constraints, additional gross
primary productivity (GPP) that could be restored ranged from 4% to 7%
depending on vegetation types (7.1% for forests, 6.1% for grasslands,
4.3% for irrigated crops, and 5.6% for rain-fed crops). In water
surplus areas, primarily in the south and east of China’s drylands, most
vegetation conversions toward higher-water-consumption types were
allowed to occur. In water deficit areas, the west of drylands, even
converting all the existing vegetation to less water-intensive types
would not compensate for the water deficit in most regions, suggesting
local vegetation may have exceeded the water-carrying capacity. Our
research highlights the importance of the potential water constraint of
vegetation restoration in drylands and provides guidance for
decision-making vegetation restoration while ensuring water
sustainability.