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Lake-area shrinkage driven by the combined effects of climate change and human activities

Qingfeng Miao, Xiaoyu Liu, Haibin Shi, Zengming Wei, Yuli Luo, Yanhua Wang, José Manuel Gonçalves, Weiying Feng

2025Ecological Indicators11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• Lake-area changes driven by climate change and human activities were studied. • Lake areas across five basins shrinked by 38.06 km 2 /year from 1987 to 2023. • Climate change drove lake dynamics in the Songhua and Northwest River Basins. • Human activities notably shrinked lakes in the Liaohe and Haihe River Basins. • Natural and human activities shaped lake-area changes in the Yellow River Basin. Examining lake-area evolution and influencing factors is essential for understanding global environmental and societal changes and supporting ecological sustainability. Inner Mongolia, China, given its unique geographical and climatic conditions, serves as a natural laboratory for investigating the complex coupling mechanisms of “climate–hydrology–humanities.” Accordingly, we analyzed data regarding annual area changes in 655 lakes across five basins obtained from Landsat, Sentinel-2, and pushbroom multispectral scanner (1987–2023), combined with meteorological, hydrological, and human factors affecting lake-area changes. Results indicated that lake areas varied from 4059.36 to 6489.46 km 2 in 1987–2023, exhibiting an overall decline of 38.06 km 2 /a ( R 2 = 0.39, p < 0.001). This trend was nonlinear, exhibiting area expansion (1987–1998), rapid shrinkage (1998–2010), and stabilization after a slight rebound (2010–2023). Natural factors dominated lake-area dynamics in the Songhua and Northwest River Basins, while human activities, particularly agriculture, were key drivers in the Liaohe, Haihe, and Yellow River Basins. These findings provide critical insights into the drivers of lake-area changes and establish a scientific basis for developing effective water-resource management and ecological protection strategies.

Topics & Concepts

ShrinkageClimate changeEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyEcologyGeographyBiologyMathematicsStatisticsHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementSoil erosion and sediment transport
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