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The difference in ecological environmental quality impact factors between human activity zone and non-human activity zone in arid regions: A case study of the northern slope of the Tianshan Mountains

Yu Cao, Jiayi Zhang, Zhengyong Zhang, Haozhe Tang, Lin Liu, Xinyi Liu, Rou Ma, Mingyu Zhang, Xueying Zhang

2025Ecological Indicators12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• Eco-environmental quality assessment based on IRSEI. • There are differences in the overall explanatory power of different factors. • The influencing factors have obvious spatial heterogeneity. • There are different EEQ formation patterns in human activity zone and non-human activity zone. A precise understanding of the status and causal mechanisms of regional ecological environment quality (EEQ) is fundamental to ecological conservation. This is especially crucial in ecologically fragile arid regions. The unique artificial oasis and desert-mountain natural landscape units on the northern slope of the Tianshan Mountains (NSTM) have formed human activity zones (HAZ) and non-human activity zones (NHAZ) with obvious natural-human characteristics. This study, using the region as an example, constructs an improved remote sensing ecological index (IRSEI) tailored for arid regions and leverages the google earth engine (GEE) platform to analyze the spatiotemporal variations in EEQ in both HAZ and NHAZ. Innovatively, it integrates multiple analytical models to propose a comprehensive analytical framework that encompasses “overall explanatory power—spatial heterogeneity—interaction relationship” for the influencing factors, thereby revealing the causal mechanisms of EEQ. The results indicate that: (1) the levels of EEQ across different zones in NSTM are ordered as follows: HAZ (0.387) > Study area (0.345) > NHAZ (0.307), with the NHAZ showing a decreasing trend. Notably, 93.01 % of the significant improvement areas are distributed in the HAZ. (2) From the perspective of the overall explanatory power of factors, ecological factors have the most significant impact on EEQ, followed by climatic factors, with some human activity factors having a relatively weaker explanatory power. The interaction effects between land use intensity, ecological factors, and other factors stand out as particularly influential in explaining EEQ. (3) The spatial heterogeneity of various factors on EEQ is significant, yet there are also similar characteristics. The influence exerted by factors within the HAZ and mountainous forest belts differs significantly from that of the surrounding areas. (4) The interactive relationships among factors vary across different zones. Human activity factors have a significant positive indirect effect on the EEQ of HAZ through their impact on ecological factors, whereas in NHAZ, it is the topographic factors that exert a significant positive indirect effect on EEQ through their influence on climatic factors. This study furnishes novel perspectives and methodologies for the assessment of EEQ as well as the comprehension of its causal mechanisms within arid regions. Moreover, it supplies valuable scientific evidence to support regional ecological environment management and sustainable development.

Topics & Concepts

AridEcologyGeographyEnvironmental qualityEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyBiologyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesRemote Sensing and Land UseUrban Green Space and Health