Ecological Footprint Analysis Based on Changing Food Consumption in a Poorly Developed Area of China

被引:12
|
作者
Zhen, Lin [1 ,2 ]
Du, Bingzhen [1 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, 11A Datun Rd, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sch Resource & Environm, Yuquan Rd, Beijing 100109, Peoples R China
来源
SUSTAINABILITY | 2017年 / 9卷 / 08期
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
food consumption; ecological footprint; biological capacity; carrying capacity; household survey; Guyuan; LAND CONVERSION PROGRAM; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; HOUSEHOLD INCOME; POLICY; METHODOLOGY; INDICATOR; CAPACITY; DEMAND; IMPACT; SCALE;
D O I
10.3390/su9081323
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The per capita ecological footprint (EF) is a useful tool to compare consumption with nature's ability to support this consumption. Guyuan is an economically impoverished region in China, where EF provides important insights into whether human consumption can be sustained by the local per capita biological capacity (BC), which represents the environment's ability to support resource use. We estimated the EF of food consumption using local equivalence and yield factors, and compared EF in 1998 and 2013 with BC, which represented the existing biologically productive area (including cultivated land, grassland, forest, and water bodies) that supports this consumption. Data were collected from household surveys, government statistics, and land use maps. We found that food consumption changed, with decreasing consumption of staple foods and increasing consumption of meat, eggs, milk, edible oils, fruit, and vegetables. Decreased staple food consumption decreased the EF for this food group, but the large increase in meat consumption greatly increased EF from meat production (to more than 41 times the 1998 value). Cultivated land contributed greatly to both EF and BC, and staple foods and vegetables were the main EF components for this land. Overall, EF from food consumption decreased from 1998 to 2013, but local BC remained 188,356 ha below EF (i.e., current consumption is not sustainable based on local resources). The Grain for Green program, which focuses on increasing the BC of forest and grassland by replacing degraded cultivated land with these land use types, decreased the BC of cultivated land, leading to wide spatial variation in both EF and BC. These results will inform policy development by revealing the condition of each region's use of the locally available production resources.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Water Footprint of Household Food Consumption in Heilongjiang Province, China
    Yuan, Qi
    Song, Guo-bao
    Zhang, Shu-shen
    2016 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE ENERGY, ENVIRONMENT AND INFORMATION ENGINEERING (SEEIE 2016), 2016, : 77 - 80
  • [22] Driving Forces of Food Consumption Water Footprint in North China
    Liu, Yang
    Lin, Jianyi
    Li, Huimei
    Huang, Ruogu
    Han, Hui
    WATER, 2021, 13 (06)
  • [23] China's ecological footprint via biomass import and consumption is increasing
    Wang, Shaojian
    Fang, Chuanglin
    Chen, Xiangjie
    Liang, Junyi
    Liu, Kangyao
    Feng, Kuishuang
    Hubacek, Klaus
    Wang, Jieyu
    COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT, 2024, 5 (01):
  • [24] Analysis of ecological economic footprint of Dengzhou City based on ecological footprint model
    Liu Guoxin
    Liu Chaorui
    Li Meifang
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INNOVATION & MANAGEMENT, VOLS I AND II, 2007, : 347 - 351
  • [25] An analysis of the relationship between water-energy-food system and economic growth in China based on ecological footprint measurement
    Xu, Lian-yan
    Huang, De-chun
    He, Zheng-qi
    Zhu, Yun
    WATER POLICY, 2022, 24 (02) : 345 - 362
  • [26] Comparative Analysis of Ecological Footprint on Ecological Campus of a Urban University in China
    Zhang, Jun
    Liu, Jing
    Liu, Wei
    Wang, Li
    Shi, Hui
    Du, Hong-xia
    SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, PTS 1-3, 2013, 616-618 : 1085 - 1089
  • [27] Ecological security assessment based on the renewable ecological footprint in the Guangdong -Hong Kong -Macao Greater Bay Area, China
    Bi, Mingli
    Xie, Gaodi
    Yao, Cuiyou
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2020, 116
  • [28] Spatiotemporal variability in urban HORECA food consumption and its ecological footprint in China (vol 687, pg 1232, 2019)
    Li, Yunyun
    Wang, Ling-en
    Cheng, Shengkui
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 747
  • [29] Horeca food waste and its ecological footprint in Lhasa, Tibet, China
    Wang, Lingen
    Xue, Li
    Li, Yunyun
    Liu, Xiaojie
    Cheng, Shengkui
    Liu, Gang
    RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING, 2018, 136 : 1 - 8
  • [30] Trade Ecological Footprint Analysis of China's Agricultural
    Diao, Weiyang
    Tian, Baiping
    Ma, Ping
    Wang, Xian'en
    NATURAL RESOURCES AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT II, PTS 1-4, 2012, 524-527 : 2340 - +