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Human expansion into Asian highlands in the 21st Century and its effects

Chao Yang, Huizeng Liu, Qingquan Li, Xuqing Wang, Wei Ma, Cuiling Liu, Fang Xu, Yuzhi Tang, Tiezhu Shi, Qibiao Wang, Yue‐Ping Xu, Jie Zhang, Xuecao Li, Gang Xu, Junyi Chen, Mo Su, Shuying Wang, Jinjing Wu, Leping Huang, Xue Li, Guofeng Wu

2022Nature Communications93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Most intensive human activities occur in lowlands. However, sporadic reports indicate that human activities are expanding in some Asian highlands. Here we investigate the expansions of human activities in highlands and their effects over Asia from 2000 to 2020 by combining earth observation data and socioeconomic data. We find that ∼23% of human activity expansions occur in Asian highlands and ∼76% of these expansions in highlands comes from ecological lands, reaching 95% in Southeast Asia. The expansions of human activities in highlands intensify habitat fragmentation and result in large ecological costs in low and lower-middle income countries, and they also support Asian developments. We estimate that cultivated land net growth in the Asian highlands contributed approximately 54% in preventing the net loss of the total cultivated land. Moreover, the growth of highland artificial surfaces may provide living and working spaces for ∼40 million people. Our findings suggest that highland developments hold dual effects and provide new insight for regional sustainable developments.

Topics & Concepts

GeographyHabitatSocioeconomic statusAgroforestrySoutheast asiaShifting cultivationFragmentation (computing)SocioeconomicsEcologyAgriculturePopulationArchaeologyBiologyDemographyEthnologyHistoryEconomicsSociologyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementClimate Change, Adaptation, Migration