Spatial-temporal variability of land use with terrain gradient in Taihang Mountain, Hebei Province

2013 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 1284-1292
Author(s):  
Ning XU ◽  
Guang-Lu ZHANG ◽  
Zi-Yu LIU
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunyan Lv ◽  
Jing Wang ◽  
Yuhuan Li ◽  
Ting He

Author(s):  
Roberto Rosà ◽  
Veronica Andreo ◽  
Valentina Tagliapietra ◽  
Ivana Baráková ◽  
Daniele Arnoldi ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Chaobin Yang ◽  
Ranghu Wang ◽  
Shuwen Zhang ◽  
Caoxiang Ji ◽  
Xie Fu

Temporal variation of urban heat island (UHI) intensity is one of the most important themes in UHI studies. However, fine-scale temporal variability of UHI with explicit spatial information is sparse in the literature. Based on the hourly air temperature from 195 meteorological stations during August 2015 in Changchun, China, hourly spatiotemporal patterns of UHI were mapped to explore the temporal variability and the effects of land use on the thermal environment using time series analysis, air temperature profiling, and spatial analysis. The results showed that: (1) high air temperature does not indicate strong UHI intensity. The nighttime UHI intensity (1.51 °C) was much stronger than that in the daytime (0.49 °C). (2) The urban area was the hottest during most of the day except the period from late morning to around 13:00 when there was about a 40% possibility for an “inverse UHI intensity” to appear. Paddy land was the coolest in the daytime, while woodland had the lowest temperature during the nighttime. (3) The rural area had higher warming and cooling rates than the urban area after sunrise and sunset. It appeared that 23 °C was the threshold at which the thermal characteristics of different land use types changed significantly.


2001 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.J. Foster ◽  
M.J. Lees ◽  
H.S. Wheater ◽  
C. Neal ◽  
B. Reynolds

Abstract. Recent concern about the risk to biota from acidification in upland areas, due to air pollution and land-use change (such as the planting of coniferous forests), has generated a need to model catchment hydro-chemistry to assess environmental risk and define protection strategies. Previous approaches have tended to concentrate on quantifying either spatial variability at a regional scale or temporal variability at a given location. However, to protect biota from ‘acid episodes’, an assessment of both temporal and spatial variability of stream chemistry is required at a catchment scale. In addition, quantification of temporal variability needs to represent both episodic event response and long term variability caused by deposition and/or land-use change. Both spatial and temporal variability in streamwater chemistry are considered in a new modelling methodology based on application to the Plynlimon catchments, central Wales. A two-component End-Member Mixing Analysis (EMMA) is used whereby low and high flow chemistry are taken to represent ‘groundwater’ and ‘soil water’ end-members. The conventional EMMA method is extended to incorporate spatial variability in the two end-members across the catchments by quantifying the Acid Neutralisation Capacity (ANC) of each in terms of a statistical distribution. These are then input as stochastic variables to a two-component mixing model, thereby accounting for variability of ANC both spatially and temporally. The model is coupled to a long-term acidification model (MAGIC) to predict the evolution of the end members and, hence, the response to future scenarios. The results can be plotted as a function of time and space, which enables better assessment of the likely effects of pollution deposition or land-use changes in the future on the stream chemistry than current methods which use catchment average values. The model is also a useful basis for further research into linkage between hydrochemistry and intra-catchment biological diversity. Keywords: hydrochemistry, End-Member Mixing Analysis (EMMA), uplands, acidification


2017 ◽  
Vol 224 ◽  
pp. 148-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chih-Da Wu ◽  
Yu-Cheng Chen ◽  
Wen-Chi Pan ◽  
Yu-Ting Zeng ◽  
Mu-Jean Chen ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 118 ◽  
pp. 03045
Author(s):  
Qian Wang ◽  
Jinlu Li ◽  
Zhongya Liang

Ecological land use is an important component of ecosystem. This study presents spatial and temporal pattern evolution characteristics of ecological land for the period from 2009 to 2017, based on GIS technology and mathematical statistics. The results show that ecological land structure is stable, amount tends to decrease, average annual decrease of 21, 000 hm2. Ecological land types were mainly transformed into farmland and urban land, Internal transformed mainly between woodland and grassland. Spatial aggregation were existed, Aggregation degree: forest land > grassland > water area and wetland > desert. But high concentration areas (“HH” related area) is reduced from 11 counties to 9 counties, and low concentration areas (“LL” related areas) increased from 37 counties to 40 counties, from 2009 to 2017. According to the results, proposals for ecological land use were put forward.


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