Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Climate change and local adaptation strategies in the middle Inner Mongolia, northern China

  • Original Article
  • Published:
Environmental Earth Sciences Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

According to records of 17 meteorological stations distributed in the study area, climate change of the middle Inner Mongolia in northern China was analyzed in this paper. Based on SPOT VGT data, combined with field investigation, local vegetation change was detected in the last 10 years. The results show that annual mean air temperature obviously rose, while precipitation slightly decreased in fluctuation in the study area during the last 50 years. Air temperature increasing rates are +0.318°C 10 year−1 during 1960-2009 and +0.423°C 10 year−1 during 1980–2009, while precipitation decreasing rates are −2.91 mm 10 year−1 during 1960–2009. There were five different dry or wet periods from the 1960s to the 2000s in order, and the wetter 1990s and the drier 2000s changed dramatically in the study area. Local climate totally tend to warm–dry conditions during the last 50 years. According to coefficient of variation (Cv) of yearly growing-season cumulative NDVI value and yearly NDVI maximum in pixel scale, vegetation had experienced huge temporal and spatial variation during the last 10 years. Recently, frequent droughts and dust storms seriously affected local agriculture and grazing activities, and resulted in heavy economic loss, especially over the drought period of 1999–2001. Faced with those drought disasters accompanied with strong dust storms, the local authorities proposed the enclosing-transferring strategy and made great efforts to adapt overt climate change and improve environment, including making selective emigration, decreasing livestock numbers, fencing grasslands and building forage production bases with irrigation instruments and actively adjusting industry structure. However, some effects and potential problems of this adaptation strategy still need to be comprehensively assessed further in longer time scales and aimed at different sub-regions.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Fig.1
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Fig. 4
Fig. 5
Fig. 6
Fig. 7
Fig. 8

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Anderson J, Bausch C (2006) Climate change and natural disasters: scientific evidence of a possible relation between recent natural disasters and climate change http://www.europarl.europa.eu/comparl/envi/pdf/externalexpertise/ieep_6leg/naturaldisasters.pdf

  • Bai ML, Hao RQ, Di RQ, Liu HW (2006) Assessment of climatic variation impact on desertification. Clim Environ Res 22(2):215–220

    Google Scholar 

  • Dong ZB, Wang XM, Liu LY (2000) Wind erosion in arid and semiarid China: an overview. J Soil Water Conserv 55(4):439–444

    Google Scholar 

  • DRC of the State Council, PRC (2007) Ecological environment management of grasslands urgently needing changes project implementation to system construction DRC of the State Council, PRC. A case study on restoration of ecological environment of Xilingol Grasslands. Investig Rep 3046(200):10–11

    Google Scholar 

  • Editorial Committee of Xilingol Meng Chorography (ECXMC) (1996) Xilingol Meng Chorography. Inner Mongolia People’s Press, Hohhot, pp 312–315

  • Holben BN (1986) Characteristics of maximum-value composite images from temporal AVHRR data. Int J Remote Sens 7(11):1417–1434

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hope AS, Boynton WL, Stow DA, Douglas DC (2003) Inter-annual growth dynamics of vegetation in the Kuparuk River watershed based on the normalized difference vegetation index. Int J Remote Sens 24(17):3413–3425

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • IPCC (2007) Climate change 2007: synthesis report. 30 http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/syr/ar4_syr_cn.pdf

  • Laczko F, Aghazarm C (2009) Migration, environment and climate change: assessing the evidence. Switzerland, International Organization for Migration, pp 1–441

  • Leys J (2009) Improving the capacity to monitor wind and water Erosion: a review. Commonwealth of Australia. http://www.nrm.gov.au

  • Li HW, Yang XP (2010) Advances and problems in the understanding of desertification in the Hunshandake sandy land during the last 30 years. Adv Earth Sci 25(6):647–655

    Google Scholar 

  • Li SG, Harazono Y, Oikawa T, Zhao HL, Ying HZ, Chang XL (2000) Grassland desertification by grazing and the resulting micrometeorological changes in Inner Mongolia. Agric For Meteorol 102(2):125–137

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Li XC, Chen Z, Ye LG, Dong H, Liu M, Zhang J, Fl Nie (2004) Rational reflections on “ecological migration”. J Inner Mongolia Univ (Humanit Social Sci) 36(5):34–38

    Google Scholar 

  • Li YH, Zhang SY (2007) Review of the research on the relationship between sand–dust storm and arid in China. Adv Earth Sci 22(11):1169–1176

    Google Scholar 

  • Liu SL, Wang T (2005) Characteristics of climatic change in the Otindag Sandy Land Region. J Desert Res 25(4):557–562

    Google Scholar 

  • Liu SL, Wang T (2007) Aeolian desertification from the mid-1970s to 2005 in Otindag Sandy Land, Northern China. Environ Geol 51(6):1057–1064

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Liu SL, Wang T, Guo J, Qu JJ, An PJ (2010) Vegetation change based on SPOT-VGT data from 1998–2007, northern China. Environ Earth Sci 60(7):1459–1466

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Otterman J (1974) Baring high-albedo soils by overgrazing: a hypothesized desertification mechanism. Science 186(4163):531–533

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Schubert SD, Suarez MJ, Pegion PJ, Koster RD, Bacmeister JT (2004) On the cause of the 1930s dust bowl. Science 303:1855–1859. doi:10.1126/science.1095048

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Science Times (2010) Fencing grassland: negative over positive effects. http://news.sciencenet.cn/dz/upload/2010112371910558.pdf

  • Shi JG, Xie D, Xin ZY, Zheng JW (2010) Analysis on climate change nearly fifty years in Xilingole Area. Chin Agric Sci Bull 26(21):318–323

    Google Scholar 

  • Shi PJ, Yan P, Yuan Y, Mark AN (2004) Wind erosion research in China: past, present and future. Prog Phys Geogr 28(3):366–386

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Shi YF, Shen YP, Ding YJ, Zhang GW (2003) An assessment of issues of climatic shift from warm–dry to warm–wet in Northwest China. China Meteorological Press, Beijing, pp 1–148

    Google Scholar 

  • Si YH, Zhang W (2008) Monitoring changes of grassland growth based on vegetation index (NDVI) of MODIS—a case study of Xilin Gol League. J Agric Sci Technol 10(5):66–70

    Google Scholar 

  • Solomon S, Qin D, Manning M, Chen Z, Marquis M, Averyt KB, Tignor M, Miller HL (2007) Contribution of Working Group I to the fourth assessment report of the intergovernmental panel on climate change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p 243

    Google Scholar 

  • Steppe S (2007) Listening to the story of the grasslands from herdsman. http://www.brooks.ngo.cn/caoyuan/download/070623_1.doc

  • Stow D, Daeschner S, Hope A, Douglas D, Petersen A, Mynemi R, Zhou L, Oechel W (2003) Variability of the seasonally integrated normalized difference vegetation index across the north slope of Alaska in the 1990s. Int J Remote Sens 24(5):1111–1117

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Stringer LC, Dyer JC, Reed MS, Dougill AJ, Twyman C, Mkwambisi D (2009) Adaptations to climate change, drought and desertification: local insights to enhance policy in southern Africa. Environ Sci Policy. doi:10.1016/j.envsci.2009.04.002

  • Tan XM (2003) Study of major drought catastrophesin China in recent 500 years. J Disaster Prev Mitig Eng 23(2):77–83

    Google Scholar 

  • Thomas DSG, Knight M, Wiggs GFS (2005) Remobilization of southern African desert dune systems by twenty-first century global warming. Nature 435:1218–1221

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • UNEP (2010) UNEP climate change factsheet—July 2010. http://www.unep.org/ClimateChange/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=HTPNmZQ_J8U%3d&tabid=233&language=en-US

  • Uthes S, Li F, Zhen L, Cao XC (2010) Payments for grassland ecosystem services: a comparison of two examples in China and Germany. J Res Ecol 1(4):319–330

    Google Scholar 

  • Wang HM, Li ZH, Han GD, Zhang Y, Wu L, Song GB (2010) The analysis on the spatial-temporal change of climate aridity in Xilinguole Steppe. Acta Ecol Sinica 30(23):6538–6545

    Google Scholar 

  • Wang T, Xue X, Luo YQ, Zhou XH, Yang B, Ta WQ, Wu W, Zhou LH (2008) Human causes of aeolian desertification in Northern China. Sci Cold Arid Reg 1:0001–0013

    Google Scholar 

  • Wang XM, Chen FH, Dong ZB (2006) The relative role of climatic and human factors in desertification in semiarid China. Global Environ Change 16:48–57

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Wang XY (2009) From contracting to recentralising in rangeland management. China Rural Survey 3:36–46

    Google Scholar 

  • Zhang LX, Liu J (2009) Key issues of ecological migration in desertified areas of northern China. Chin J Ecol 28(7):1394–1398

    Google Scholar 

  • Zhang X, Arimoto R, An Z (1997) Dust emission from Chinese desert sources linked to variations in atmospheric circulation. J Geophys Res 102(23D):28041–28047

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Zhao HL, Zhao XY, Zhou RL, Zhang TH, Drake S (2005) Desertification processes due to heavy grazing in sandy rangeland, Inner Mongolia. J Arid Environ 62:309–319

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Zhu ZD (1997) Global changes and desertification. Earth Science Frontiers China University of Geosciences. Beijing 4(1–2):213–219

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by funds from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 40801003) and the Major State Basic Research Development Program of China (973 Program) (No. 2009CB421308). The authors thank the reviewers for their valuable advices.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Shulin Liu.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Liu, S., Wang, T. Climate change and local adaptation strategies in the middle Inner Mongolia, northern China. Environ Earth Sci 66, 1449–1458 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12665-011-1357-5

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12665-011-1357-5

Keywords

Navigation