Please wait a minute...
Journal of Arid Land  2012, Vol. 4 Issue (3): 300-309    DOI: 10.3724/SP.J.1227.2012.00300
Research Articles     
Simulating the vegetation-producing process in small watersheds in the Loess Plateau of China
KaiBo WANG1, ZhouPing SHANGGUAN2
1 State Key Laboratory of Loess and Quaternary Geology, Institute of Earth Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xi’an 710075, China;
2 Northwest Agriculture and Forestry University, Yangling 712100, China
Download:   PDF(1908KB)
Export: BibTeX | EndNote (RIS)      

Abstract  Small watersheds are the basic composition unit of the Loess Plateau in China. An accurate estimation of vegetation net primary productivity (NPP) is of great significance for eco-benefit evaluation in small watershed management in this region. Here we describe the development and testing of a vegetation-producing process model (VPP) of a small watershed in the Loess Plateau. The model couples three modules: radiation adjustment; soil hydrological processes; and vegetation carbon assimilation. Model validation indicates that the VPP model can be used to estimate the NPP of small watersheds in the region. With the VPP model, we estimated the spatial NPP distributions in the Yangou watershed for 2007. The results show that in the Yangou watershed the NPP is relatively low, averaging 168 g C/(m2•a). Trees and shrubs have a higher NPP than crops and grasses. The NPP is larger on the partly shaded and shaded slopes than on the partly sunny and sunny slopes. The NPP on the slopes increases gradually on 0–20° slopes and decreases slightly on slopes steeper than 20°. Our simulation indicates that the vegetation type is the most important factor in determining the NPP distribution in small watersheds in the Loess Plateau.

Key wordsdry season grazing      grass species composition      livestock grazing      soil nutrients      Kenya     
Received: 13 October 2011      Published: 03 September 2012
Fund:  

Strategic Priority Research Program (XDA05050403) and the Key Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences (KZZD-EW-04).

Corresponding Authors:
Cite this article:

KaiBo WANG, ZhouPing SHANGGUAN. Simulating the vegetation-producing process in small watersheds in the Loess Plateau of China. Journal of Arid Land, 2012, 4(3): 300-309.

URL:

http://jal.xjegi.com/10.3724/SP.J.1227.2012.00300     OR     http://jal.xjegi.com/Y2012/V4/I3/300

Allen R G, Pereira L S, Raes D, et al. 1998. Crop Evapotranspiration—Guidelines for Computing Crop Water Requirements. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

Arneth A, Harrison S P, Zaehle S, et al. 2010. Terrestrial biogeochemical feedbacks in the climate system. Nature Geoscience, 3(8): 525–532.

Cramer W, Kicklighter D W, Bondeau A, et al. 1999. Comparing global models of terrestrial net primary productivity (NPP): overview and key results. Global Change Biology, 5(Suppl. 1): 1–15.

Farquhar G D, Von Caemmerer S, Berry J A. 1980. A biochemical model of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in leaves of C3 species. Planta, 149(1): 78–90.

Fu B P. 1998. The differences and variations in components of radiation budget on underlying surfaces of different topographies. Scientia Atmospherica Sinica, 22: 178–190.

Gao Q, Reynolds J F. 2003. Historical shrub-grass transitions in the northern Chihuahuan desert: modeling the effects of shifting rainfall seasonality and event size over a landscape gradient. Global Change Biology, 9(10): 1475–1493.

He Y, Dong W J, Ji J J, et al. 2005. The net primary production simulation of terrestrial ecosystems in China by AVIM. Advances in Earth Science, 20(3): 345–349.

Huang Y M. 2003. Study on ecological aspects of water balance process at watershed level in hilly regions of the Loess Plateau, China: a case study in Zhifanggou watershed. Ph.D. Dissertation, Beijing: Beijing Normal University.

Li K R, Wang S Q, Cao M K. 2004. Vegetation and soil carbon storage in China. Science in China: Series D, 47(1): 49–57.

Li Y S. 2001. Effects of forest on water circle on the Loess Plateau. Journal of Natural Resources, 16(5): 427–432.

Li Z W, Cai Q G, Zeng G M. 2004. Regional simulation on land productivity in the Loess Plateau based on GIS and soil erosion. Resources Science, 26(21): 91–97.

Liu G B. 1999. Soil conservation and sustainable agriculture on the Loess Plateau: challenges and prospects. Ambio, 28(8): 663–668.

Liu J, Chen J M, Cihlar J, et al. 1997. A process-based boreal ecosystem productivity simulator using remote sensing inputs. Remote Sensing of Environment, 62(2): 158–175.

Liu J H. 2003. Spatial and temporal variation of soil moisture content and vegetation productivity at a small watershed of the Loess Plateau. MSc. Dissertation, Yangling: Northwest A & F University, China.

Liu X Z, Kang S Z, Liu D L, et al. 2005. SCS model based on geographic information and its application to simulate rainfall-runoff relationship at typical small watershed level in Loess Plateau. Transactions of the Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering, 21(5): 93–97.

Luo T X. 1996. Patterns of net primary productivity for Chinese major forest types and their mathematical models. Ph.D. Dissertation, Beijing: Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Melillo J M, McGuire A D, Kicklighter D W, et al. 1993. Global climate change and terrestrial net primary production. Nature, 363: 234–240.

Nemani R R, Keeling C D, Hashimoto H, et al. 2003. Climate-driven increases in global terrestrial net primary production from 1982 to 1999. Science, 300: 1560–1563.

Piao S L, Fang J Y, Zhou L M, et al. 2005. Changes in vegetation net primary productivity from 1982 to 1999 in China. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 19(2): GB2027.

Piao S L, Ciais P, Friedlingstein P, et al. 2008. Net carbon dioxide losses of northern ecosystems in response to autumn warming. Nature, 451: 49–52.

Pimentel D. 2006. Soil erosion: a food and environmental threat. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 8(1): 119–137.

Potter C S, Randerson J T, Field C B, et al. 1993. Terrestrial ecosystem production: a process model based on global satellite and surface data. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 7(4): 811–841.

Prioul J L, Chartier P. 1977. Partitioning of transfer and carboxylation components of intracellular resistance to photosynthetic CO2 fixation: a critical analysis of the methods used. Annals of Botany, 41(4): 789–800.

Shangguan Z P, Shao M A, Li Y S, et al. 2004. Impacts of forest vegetation on the soil water cycle in Loess Plateau. Journal of Chinese Soil and Water Conservation, 35: 177–185.

Wang L, Wang Q, Wei S, et al. 2008. Soil desiccation for loess soils on natural and regrown areas. Forest Ecology and Management, 255(7): 2467–2477.

Wu F Q, Zhou Z L, Liu H B. 2005. Productivity of crop-fruit ecological agriculture in middle-south Loess Plateau. Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology, 16(2): 262–266.

Xia Y Q, Shao M A. 2008. Soil water carrying capacity for vegetation: a hydrologic and biogeochemical process model solution. Ecological Modelling, 214(2–4): 112–124.

Xu H M, Jia H K, Huang Y M. 2005. A simulation model of net primary production at watershed scale in hilly area of Loess Plateau, China. Acta Ecologica Sinica, 25(5): 1064–1074.

Xu X, Gao Q, Liu Y H, et al. 2009. Coupling a land use model and an ecosystem model for a crop-pasture zone. Ecological Modelling, 220(19): 2503–2511.

Yang W Z, Shao M A. 2000. Study on Soil Moisture in the Loess Plateau. Beijing: Science Press.

Zeng Y, Qiu X, Liu C, et al. 2005. Distributed modeling of direct solar radiation on rugged terrain of the Yellow River basin. Acta Geographica Sinica, 60(4): 680–688.

Zhang N, Yu G R, Yu Z L, et al. 2003. Simulation of temporal and spatial distribution of natural vegetation light utilization efficiency based on 3S. Acta Phytoecologica Sinica, 27(3): 325–336.

Zheng F L. 2006. Effect of vegetation changes on soil erosion on the Loess Plateau. Pedosphere, 16(4): 420–427.

Zhou Y H, Xiang Y Q, Shan F Z. 1984. A climatological study on the photo-synthetically active radiation. Acta Meteorologica Sinica, 42: 387–397.

Zuazo V H D, Pleguezuelo C R R. 2008. Soil-erosion and runoff prevention by plant covers: a review. Agronomy for Sustainable Development, 28(1): 65–86.
[1] MA Xinxin, ZHAO Yunge, YANG Kai, MING Jiao, QIAO Yu, XU Mingxiang, PAN Xinghui. Long-term light grazing does not change soil organic carbon stability and stock in biocrust layer in the hilly regions of drylands[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2023, 15(8): 940-959.
[2] Z MGANGA Kevin, M NYARIKI Dickson, K R MUSIMBA Nashon, A AMWATA Dorothy. Determinants and rates of land degradation: Application of stationary time-series model to data from a semi-arid environment in Kenya[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2018, 10(1): 1-11.
[3] LANG Lili, WANG Xunming, WANG Guangtao, HUA Ting, WANG Hongtao. Effects of aeolian processes on nutrient loss from surface soils and their significance for sandy desertification in Mu Us Desert, China: a wind tunnel approach[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2015, 7(4): 421-428.
[4] Stephen M MUREITHI, Ann VERDOODT, Charles KK GACHENE, Jesse T NJOKA, Vivian O WASONGA, Stefaan De NEVE, Elizabeth MEYERHOFF, Eric Van RANST. Impact of enclosure management on soil properties and microbial biomass in a restored semi-arid rangeland, Kenya[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2014, 6(5): 561-570.
[5] John KIOKO, John Warui KIRINGE, Simon Ole SENO. Impacts of livestock grazing on a savanna grassland in Kenya[J]. Journal of Arid Land, 2012, 4(1): 29-35.