Potential impacts of landuse changes on the supply–demand relationship of water resources in semiarid loess hilly regions
Longtan Qiao, Qiang Li, Haoxuan Zhang, Zixuan Zhang, Hanwen Yang, Yilong Zhu, Zhengzheng Mao

TL;DR
This study examines how land use changes in a semiarid region could affect water supply and demand, predicting increased water security risks by 2050.
Contribution
The study introduces an integrated PLUS-Markov chain and InVEST model approach to project landuse and water resource dynamics in semiarid regions.
Findings
By 2050, cropland decreased by 6.7% under the NIS scenario, mainly converting to grassland.
The EDS scenario led to rapid urbanization with a built-up area expansion rate of 2.99 km²/year.
Water demand is projected to increase by 43.3% by 2050, with 90% of the region facing water security risks.
Abstract
In ecologically fragile semiarid loess hilly agricultural regions, water resources constitute a critical constraint on sustainable development. Previous studies have demonstrated that landuse changes significantly affect the spatiotemporal distribution of water through vegetation cover modifications and hydrological process shifts. This study aims to predict future landuse changes and assess their impacts on water supply and demand, thereby providing a basis for sustainable water resource management. The current study employed an integrated PLUS-Markov chain approach (with a high validation accuracy, OA > 0.9 and Kappa > 0.83) complemented by the InVEST model to project landuse arrangements under three scenarios (NIS, FSS, and EDS) for Guyuan city in 2030, 2040, and 2050, and to analyze the consequent spatiotemporal evolution of water supply and demand risks. The results indicated that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLand Use and Ecosystem Services · Hydrology and Watershed Management Studies · Soil and Land Suitability Analysis
