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Cropland redistribution to marginal lands undermines environmental sustainability. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Cropland shifts from high-quality areas in southern China to marginal lands in the northeast and northwest (1990-2015) were driven by urbanization and aimed at maintaining food security, resulting in significant land use changes.
  • - This expansion into ecologically sensitive zones led to negative environmental impacts, including increased wind erosion, water usage, fertilizer application, and reduced natural habitats.
  • - Future policies promoting more reclamation of marginal lands could worsen environmental issues and threaten food security, suggesting a need to limit such practices and focus on increasing crop yields for sustainable food production.

Article Abstract

Cropland redistribution to marginal land has been reported worldwide; however, the resulting impacts on environmental sustainability have not been investigated sufficiently. Here we investigated the environmental impacts of cropland redistribution in China. As a result of urbanization-induced loss of high-quality croplands in south China (∼8.5 t ha), croplands expanded to marginal lands in northeast (∼4.5 t ha) and northwest China (∼2.9 t ha) during 1990-2015 to pursue food security. However, the reclamation in these low-yield and ecologically vulnerable zones considerably undermined local environmental sustainability, for example increasing wind erosion (+3.47%), irrigation water consumption (+34.42%), fertilizer use (+20.02%) and decreasing natural habitats (-3.11%). Forecasts show that further reclamation in marginal lands per current policies would exacerbate environmental costs by 2050. The future cropland security risk will be remarkably intensified because of the conflict between food production and environmental sustainability. Our research suggests that globally emerging reclamation of marginal lands should be restricted and crop yield boost should be encouraged for both food security and environmental benefits.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8776548PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwab091DOI Listing

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