TY - JOUR
T1 - Nonnegligible cascading impacts of global urban expansion on net primary productivity
AU - Liu, Kangyao
AU - Pei, Fengsong
AU - Liu, Xiaoping
AU - Zeng, Zhenzhong
AU - Zhu, Peng
AU - Fang, Chuanglin
AU - Xu, Xiaocong
AU - Wang, Shaojian
AU - Mao, Jiafu
AU - Chen, Xiuzhi
AU - Wu, Changjiang
AU - Cai, Yiling
AU - Zeng, Li
AU - Shi, Qian
AU - Li, Xia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of National Academy of Sciences.
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - Accelerated global urban expansion not only directly occupies surrounding ecosystems, but also induces cascading losses of natural vegetation elsewhere through cropland displacement. Yet, how such effects alter the net primary productivity (NPP) worldwide remains unclear. Here, we quantified the direct and cascading impacts of global urban expansion on terrestrial NPP from 1992 to 2020 and projected the impacts under the shared socioeconomic pathways framework by 2100. We found that global urban expansion caused a cascading loss of 29.2 to 63.9 Tg C/year of terrestrial NPP in the historical period (1992–2020), accounting for 13–29% of the total direct NPP loss. Instead, our projections indicate that during 2020–2100, mainly due to the increased relocation of displaced croplands to low-productive ecosystems, the cascading impacts gradually change from negative to positive, leading to a net NPP increase. Such an increase may offset up to 7% of the total direct NPP loss, better balancing crop compensation with NPP maintenance. Our findings highlight the unexpected large cascading impacts of urban expansion on the carbon cycle and stress the importance of regulating land transitions to curtail land-use emissions.
AB - Accelerated global urban expansion not only directly occupies surrounding ecosystems, but also induces cascading losses of natural vegetation elsewhere through cropland displacement. Yet, how such effects alter the net primary productivity (NPP) worldwide remains unclear. Here, we quantified the direct and cascading impacts of global urban expansion on terrestrial NPP from 1992 to 2020 and projected the impacts under the shared socioeconomic pathways framework by 2100. We found that global urban expansion caused a cascading loss of 29.2 to 63.9 Tg C/year of terrestrial NPP in the historical period (1992–2020), accounting for 13–29% of the total direct NPP loss. Instead, our projections indicate that during 2020–2100, mainly due to the increased relocation of displaced croplands to low-productive ecosystems, the cascading impacts gradually change from negative to positive, leading to a net NPP increase. Such an increase may offset up to 7% of the total direct NPP loss, better balancing crop compensation with NPP maintenance. Our findings highlight the unexpected large cascading impacts of urban expansion on the carbon cycle and stress the importance of regulating land transitions to curtail land-use emissions.
KW - cascading impact
KW - cropland displacement
KW - global urban expansion
KW - net primary productivity
KW - shared socioeconomic pathways
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85216684321
U2 - 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae220
DO - 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae220
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85216684321
SN - 2752-6542
VL - 4
JO - PNAS Nexus
JF - PNAS Nexus
IS - 1
M1 - pgae220
ER -