Climate warming and land use change in Heilongjiang Province, Northeast China
Climate warming and land use change in Heilongjiang Province, Northeast China
Jay Gaoa, Liu Yansuib
a School of Environment, University of Auckland, Auckland, Private Bag 92019, New Zealand
b Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China
Abstract: This study explores the relationship between climatewarming and rice paddy expansion in HeilongjiangProvince of China. It is found that paddy fields more than quadrupled from 3479 km2 in 1958 to 14 564 km2 in 1980, and increased further to 21,940 km2 in 2000. The newly gained paddy fields originated chiefly from dry fields (46.35%), swamps (30.22%), and primary forest (nearly 10%) during 1958每1980. During 1980-2000 paddy fields expanded at the expense of dry fields (70.50%), swamp (16.59%), and grassland (10.13%). Analysis of climate data shows a warming of over 2 ∼C from the 1960s to the 2000s in most places. All 28 meteorological stations except one experienced a warming trend. Spatially, the expansion of paddy fields coincided closely with the spatial distribution of annual temperature. These fields were located mostly between the isolines of 2每3 ∼C. Sowing area of grain increased at a modest rate during the 1970s and the 1980s when >0 ∼C area expanded rapidly. However, sowing area of rice rose in the 1990s and 2000s at a rate twice higher than that for sowing area of grain in the preceding decades. Thus, the expansion of paddy fields at the expense of other land covers was made possible owing to climatewarming in the preceding decade. On average, it takes about 20 years for agricultural practices to adapt to the warmer climate.
Applied Geography, 2011, 31(2):476-482.