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Library Historical landscape dynamics of Inner Mongolia: patterns, drivers, and impacts

Historical landscape dynamics of Inner Mongolia: patterns, drivers, and impacts

Historical landscape dynamics of Inner Mongolia: patterns, drivers, and impacts

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201500220980
Pages
1579-1598

CONTEXT: Understanding the causes and consequences of land use and land cover change in drylands is crucial for global sustainability. Inner Mongolia consists of arid and semiarid ecosystems of global importance. OBJECTIVES: Our main goal was twofold: to review the patterns and drivers of land use and land cover change in Inner Mongolia, and to discuss ecological impacts and strategies for promoting landscape and regional sustainability. METHODS: We took an interdisciplinary and retrospective approach, based on historical records and remote sensing data. RESULTS: Inner Mongolia has evolved from an ocean to a forested region and then to a dryland area in the past millions of years. As a cradle of Chinese civilization, Inner Mongolia has experienced a series of land transitions from localized primitive agriculture that occurred in prehistoric times to broad-scale nomadic pastoralism that lasted for a few 1000 years, and to sedentary pastoralism with increasing agriculture and urbanization since the 1960s. The general land use pattern has long been shaped by the interactions between nomadic pastoralism and agrarian culture. The major drivers of land use and land cover change include: climate, demography, socioeconomic structures, institutional changes, and technological innovations. CONCLUSIONS: The landscapes of Inner Mongolia have evolved historically through several phases, and the profound and unsustainable landscape transformations during the past 50 years have been driven primarily by land use policies. Strategies based on landscape sustainability science are needed to curb ecosystem degradation and promote sustainability in the region.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Wu, Jianguo
Zhang, Qing
Li, Ang
Liang, Cunzhu

Publisher(s)
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