# Quantifying responses of climatic and anthropogenic factors on vegetation normalized difference vegetation index variabilities over Yellow River Basin, China

**Authors:** Zhilei Yu, Ligen Wang, Junfei Yan, Zhe Yuan, Xiangyang Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2026.1756685 · 2026-02-27

## TL;DR

This study examines how climate and human activities affect vegetation growth in China's Yellow River Basin from 2001 to 2020.

## Contribution

The study quantifies the relative contributions of climate and anthropogenic factors to vegetation changes in different regions of the Yellow River Basin.

## Key findings

- Over 90% of the Yellow River Basin showed vegetation greening with an average NDVI increase of 0.055 per decade.
- Anthropogenic activities contributed more (65%) to NDVI variation than climatic factors (35%).
- Human activities were the main drivers of vegetation greening in the middle and lower basins.

## Abstract

Climatic change and anthropogenic activities have substantially influenced vegetation distribution in recent decades. However, identifying the dominant driving factors of vegetation variation remains challenging.

This study investigated vegetation dynamics and quantified their responses to climatic factors (effective precipitation (EFPR) and active accumulated temperature ≥10 °C (ACTE)) and anthropogenic activities (urbanization, afforestation, and cultivation) for the Yellow River Basin (YRB).

The results showed that the YRB experienced vegetation greening in NDVI (as measured by normalized difference vegetation index, NDVI) during the period from 2001 to 2020. More than 90% of the regions in the YRB showed an increasing NDVI trend, with mean rates of 0.055 per decade. In regions with significant (p < 0.05) variations in NDVI, ERPE, ACTE, and anthropogenic activities contributed to vegetation dynamics at rates of 0.012 per decade, 0.007 per decade, and 0.036 per decade, respectively. Contributions of climatic and anthropogenic factors accounted for 35% and 65% of the total NDVI variations, respectively.

Both climatic and anthropogenic factors drove the vegetation growth. In the alpine source regions of the Yellow river, climatic factors were the primary drivers of significant NDVI change. In the MB_YRB (middle basin) and the LB_YRB (lower basin), human activities were the main factors driving vegetation greening. Only in areas with urban agglomeration, such as Xi’an, Zhengzhou and Xi’ning cities, were anthropogenic activities associated with vegetation browning.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

19 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12982358/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12982358