DOI: 10.3390/w18121508 ISSN: 2073-4441

Analysis of the Spatiotemporal Patterns of Water Conservation and Its Soil Driving Forces

Xiaolei Yan, Qianwen Zhan, Seping Dai, Chuanfu Zang

Soil is the principal physical space for water conservation (WC), so analyzing the driving forces of soil on WC is significant for studying WC services and integrated environmental management. Guangdong Province, a major economic province in China, was taken as a research case to deeply analyze the spatiotemporal pattern of WC function from 2000 to 2020 with InVEST, and to reveal its soil driving forces using a classical mathematical statistics method. We found that, from 2000 to 2020, the WC functions in Guangdong Province exhibited significant spatiotemporal differences. High-value regions were mainly concentrated in the northern and western mountainous regions, while low-value areas were primarily in the Pearl River Delta. The total WC in Guangdong showed a fluctuating upward trend, with 10.71% of its area experiencing extremely significant improvement in the Pearl River Delta, followed by Northern Guangdong. Moreover, WC is influenced by the types and distribution areas of different soils. Red soil has the highest WC depth and volume, followed by paddy soil, while lateritic red soil has the lowest WC depth. Furthermore, soil components exhibited complex stratified relationships with precipitation-normalized WC (PNWC). Components characterized by cation exchange capacity (CEC), pH, and total exchangeable bases (TEB) were positively associated with PNWC, whereas aluminum saturation (ALSA) showed a negative association within the corresponding soil components. The findings provide an important scientific basis for the ecological governance of ecosystem WC functions and water resource management.

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