DOI: 10.3390/land15071188 ISSN: 2073-445X

Differences in the Mechanisms Influencing the Urban Heat Island Effect Between Representative Southern and Northern Chinese Cities: A Case Study of Wuhan and Xi’an

Zhaowei Tang, Guanchen Liu, Yueying Zhang, Zhaoyang Yan, Jiarui Li, Xin Fu

Against the backdrop of rapid urbanization and climate warming, the urban heat island (UHI) effect has severely affected ecological security and public health. Existing studies have often focused on single-city analyses or large-sample averages, with insufficient attention to the nonlinear driving mechanisms of UHI under different hydrothermal contexts. This study selects Wuhan and Xi’an as representative cities, constructing an explainable machine learning framework to interpret and compare UHI intensity across feature importance, nonlinear responses, factor interactions, and spatial differentiation. The results show that, in Wuhan, the top five factors contribute 62.4%, reflecting a composite dominance of ecology, spatial morphology, location, and human activities. In Xi’an, the top five factors contribute 72.0%, indicating a more concentrated dominant structure. Nonlinear responses reveal that key factors like NDVI have distinct effect thresholds and mechanisms in the two cities. Spatially, Wuhan displays a continuous gradient pattern characterized by center-promoting and peripheral-suppressing effects, whereas Xi’an presents a block-like mosaic structure composed of multiple juxtaposed districts. These differences suggest that UHI mitigation should move beyond a uniform control model and instead adopt climate-sensitive strategies that account for the dominant factor combinations, response thresholds, and spatial organization of each city. The proposed framework and findings provide scientific support for understanding UHI mechanisms under different hydrothermal contexts and offer targeted implications for thermal environment regulation and spatial planning in cities with similar climatic and environmental characteristics.

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