Monitoring and Assessing Ecological Environmental Quality in Qianping Reservoir, Central China: A Remote Sensing Ecological Index (RSEI) Approach
Enkai Xu, Guohang Zhang, Hua Wang, Mei Yang, Hao Tian, Ming Zhao, Nalin Dong, Congshi Li, Yongge Hu, Guohang Tian, Yakai Lei, Qianwang Chen, Dianwei Wei
Abstract
The ecological impacts of dam and reservoir construction necessitate systematic environmental quality evaluation (EEQ) to reconcile ecological protection with sustainable development. To address this need, we integrated the Remote Sensing Ecological Index (RSEI)—a comprehensive metric synthesizing greenness, humidity, heat, and dryness—with a Land Use Change Ecological Response (LUCER) model to quantify the long-term EEQ dynamics in reservoir-affected regions. This study utilized Landsat and Sentinel-2 remote sensing imagery with a 10 m resolution from the years 2000, 2005, 2010, 2015, and 2020 to compute the RSEI for the Qianping Reservoir area in Henan Province, investigating the spatiotemporal variations in EEQ. Key findings reveal: (1) Temporal trend: EEQ showed fluctuating improvement, with RSEI projected to rise gradually until 2030. (2) Spatial pattern: A lower ecological quality in central reservoir zones contrasts with higher quality in surrounding mountainous areas. (3) Mechanism: The Land Use Change Ecological Response (LUCER) model reveals that the conversion of cultivated land to forestland and grassland drives significant EEQ improvements, counterbalancing the negative impacts of hydrological fragmentation caused by reservoir construction and urbanization. This study advances RSEI applications in reservoir ecology by establishing a coupled monitoring–prediction framework, providing actionable insights for dam-related ecological restoration and governance.