Coupling RUSLE with Spatial Econometrics: A 35-Year Assessment of Soil Erosion Dynamics and Driving Factors on the Loess Plateau, China (1990–2024)
Yuhanbing Liang, Wen Dai, Yujin Xia, Jiangbing Sun, Qigen LinSoil erosion poses a severe threat to agricultural productivity and ecological security on the Loess Plateau. However, previous studies have rarely integrated physical modeling, elasticity coefficients, and spillover effects into a unified framework at the county level. To address this gap, this study coupled the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE) with the Spatial Durbin Model (SDM) to systematically investigate the spatiotemporal dynamics, factor elasticity characteristics, and spatial dependence mechanisms of soil erosion on the Loess Plateau from 1990 to 2024. Results show that the annual average erosion rate decreased by 15.5%, with a highly volatile phase before 2001 and a stabilized, low-erosion phase thereafter. The driving factors exhibited marked heterogeneity in direction and strength. The land cover and management factor (C) was the strongest erosion-reducing factor, whereas annual precipitation (PRE) was the primary natural erosion-enhancing factor. County-level erosion also displayed significant positive spatial dependence. PRE had a stable positive indirect effect, whereas C and the support practice factor (P) mainly contained erosion within local jurisdictions. These findings of a unified RUSLE–SDM framework reveal a joint driving mechanism of localized human interventions and climate-driven cross-regional spillovers, providing quantitative support for differentiated soil and water conservation strategies on the Loess Plateau.