| Literature DB >> 34949016 |
Yao Lu1, Min Zhou2, Guoliang Ou3, Zuo Zhang4, Li He5, Yuxiang Ma2, Chaonan Ma2, Jiating Tu2, Siqi Li2.
Abstract
Land-use allocation models can effectively support sustainable land use. A large number of studies solve the problems of land-use planning by constructing models, such as mathematical models and spatial analysis models. However, these models fail to fully and comprehensively consider three uncertain factors of land-use systems: randomness, interval and fuzziness. 33Therefore, through the study of the watershed land-use system, this paper develops a land-use allocation model considering the regional land-society-economy-environment system under uncertain conditions. On the basis of this model, an interval fuzzy two-stage random land-use allocation model (IFTSP-LUAM) combining social, economic and ecological factors is proposed to provide sustainable development strategies at the basin level. In addition, the proposed IFTSP-LUAM takes into account the above three uncertainties and multistage, multiobjective, dynamic, systematic and complex characteristics of typical land-use planning systems. The results showed that the model considers more socioeconomic and ecological factors and can effectively reflect the quantitative relationship between the increase in economic benefits and the decrease in environmental costs of a land-use system. The model was applied to land-use planning of Nansihu River Basin in Shandong Province. The results provided a series of suitable land-use patterns and environmental emission scenarios under uncertain conditions, which can help the watershed environmental protection bureau and watershed land-use decision-makers to formulate appropriate land-use policies, so as to balance social and economic development and ecological protection. The simulation results can provide support for an in-depth analysis of land-use patterns and the trade-off between economic development and ecological environment protection.Entities:
Keywords: South Four Lake watershed; eco-environmental constraints; ecological environment protection; interval fuzzy two-stage stochastic model; sustainable land use
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34949016 PMCID: PMC8708993 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182413411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The study area.
Figure 2Framework of IFTSP-LUAM.
Description of the model.
| Objective Function | Maximum Economic Benefit from the Land-Use System |
|---|---|
| Economic constraint | government investment should afford the system cost |
| grain production should meet the demand [ | |
| water production should meet the demand [ | |
| water consumption of all land-uses should not exceed the available water supply [ | |
| electricity power consumption of all land-uses should not exceed the available electricity power supply | |
| Social constraint | maximum population should not exceed the land carrying capacity (LCC) |
| planning labor should not exceed the available labor | |
| Land-use suitability constraint | maximum land areas of each type of land use should accord with the results of the land suitability assessment [ |
| Environmental constraint | wastewater should not exceed the wastewater treatment capacity |
| solid waste should not exceed the solid waste treatment capacity and solid waste handling capabilities of the landfill | |
| air pollutants should not exceed the discharge limits [ | |
| Ecological constraint | planning agricultural land soil erosion should not exceed the available soil erosion area |
| fertilizer consumption should not exceed the maximum fertilizer consumption [ | |
| Technical constraint | the sum of the allocated land area is the total land area of the study area |
| the independent variable cannot be negative |
Descriptions of the symbols.
| Symbol | Descriptions | Symbol | Descriptions |
|---|---|---|---|
| NBL | The objective function, which represents the net benefit from land-use system of South Four Lake watershed (RMB) |
| The independent variable, which means land areas of each land use |
| RMB | Renminbi (RMB) is the legal currency of China | UB | The unit benefit of various types of land-uses |
| ± | Discrete interval values |
| Fuzzy equal |
| USTC | The unit solid-waste-tackling cost of various land-uses | UGTC | The unit waste-gas-tackling cost of various land-uses |
| UWTC | The unit wastewater tackling cost of various land-uses | UWSC | The unit water-supply cost of various land-uses |
| UMC | The unit maintenance cost of various land-uses | UESC | The unit electric power-supply cost of various land-uses |
|
| The land suitability condition, where | UDC | The unit developing costs of unused land (RMB/km2) |
|
| The planning period, where |
| The type of land-use, where |
Nomenclature for parameters and variables.
| Symbol | Descriptions |
|---|---|
| MGI | The maximum government investment in South Four Lake watershed (RMB) |
|
| The fuzzy less than symbol |
| UGP | The unit grain production from cultivated land (ton/km2) |
| DGP | The demand grain production in South Four Lake watershed (ton) |
|
| The fuzzy greater than symbol |
| UWP | The unit water production from water land (ton/km2) |
| DWP | The demanded water production in South Four Lake watershed (ton) |
| UWC | The unit water consumption of land-use ( |
| AWC | The available water supply in South Four Lake watershed (m3) |
| UEC | The unit electric power consumption of all types of land-uses (kilowatt hour/km2, kWh/km2) |
| AES | The available electric power supply in South Four Lake watershed (kilowatt hour, kWh) |
| PP | The planning population (person) |
| MLCC | The maximum LCC in a unit area in South Four Lake watershed (person/km2) |
| PLU | The planning labor in a unit land area (person/km2) |
| AL | The available labor in South Four Lake watershed (person) |
| HSL | The highly suitable land areas for land-use |
| WDF | The wastewater discharging factors of some types of land-uses ( |
| WPC | The wastewater treatment plant capacity in the South Four Lake watershed (ton) |
|
| The probability of violating the constraints of environmental capacities; and |
| SDF | The solid waste discharging factors of some types of land-uses (j = 1–5, ton/km2) |
| SHL | The solid waste handled by unit area of landfill (ton/km2) |
| STC | The solid waste treatment plant capacity (except for the landfill) in South Four Lake watershed (ton) |
| ADF | The air pollutant discharge factors of some types of land-uses ( |
| ADC | The air pollutant discharge capacity in South Four Lake watershed (ton) |
| SER | The SE rate of agricultural land (%) |
| ASE | The available agricultural land SE area in South Four Lake watershed (km2) |
| FCU | The fertilizer consumption in a unit agricultural land (ton/km2) |
| MFC | The maximum fertilizer consumption in South Four Lake watershed (ton) |
| TLA | The total land area of the South Four Lake watershed (km2) |
Benefit/cost parameters (RMB/km2).
| Benefit Parameters | Unit | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower Bound | Upper Bound | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | ||
| 106 | 53.58 | 55.45 | 58.94 | 63.77 | 73.67 | 91.83 | |
| 106 | 31.77 | 33.64 | 34.95 | 38.69 | 43.68 | 55.71 | |
| 106 | 0.12 | 0.15 | 0.13 | 0.17 | 0.17 | 0.25 | |
| 106 | 21.18 | 22.43 | 23.30 | 25.79 | 29.12 | 37.14 | |
| 106 | 8.10 | 11.21 | 8.91 | 12.89 | 11.14 | 18.56 | |
| 103 | 93.45 | 105.91 | 102.80 | 121.80 | 128.49 | 175.39 | |
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| 103 | 104.04 | 116.50 | 98.84 | 114.17 | 123.55 | 164.40 | |
| 103 | 61.05 | 87.10 | 58.00 | 85.36 | 72.50 | 122.92 | |
Land suitability assessment parameters (km2).
| Land-Use Types | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower Bound | Upper Bound | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | |
| 1834.03 | 2677.22 | 1889.05 | 3533.93 | 2342.43 | 5194.87 | |
| 822.72 | 1200.97 | 847.40 | 1585.28 | 1050.78 | 2330.36 | |
| 15,165.37 | 22,137.68 | 15,620.33 | 29,221.73 | 19,369.20 | 42,955.95 | |
| 587.38 | 857.44 | 605.01 | 1131.82 | 750.21 | 1663.77 | |
| 227.81 | 332.55 | 234.65 | 438.97 | 290.96 | 645.29 | |
| 5801.89 | 8469.32 | 5975.95 | 11,179.50 | 7410.17 | 16,433.87 | |
| 29.61 | 40.06 | 29.61 | 40.06 | 29.61 | 40.06 | |
| 730.60 | 988.46 | 730.60 | 988.46 | 730.60 | 988.46 | |
Social/economical parameters.
| Symbol | Lower Bound | Upper Bound | Symbol | Lower Bound | Upper Bound |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MGI (1012 RMB) | 92.15 | 103.99 | MLCC (person/ km2) | 789.00 | 854.00 |
| UGP (ton/km2) | 2.84 | 3.91 | PLU (person/ km2) | 312.58 | 442.19 |
| DGP (106 ton) | 5.34 | 6.97 | AL (103 person) | 4498.00 | 5643.00 |
| UWP (ton/km2) | 2.25 | 6.51 | WDF (103 ton/ km2) | 5.67 | 7.28 |
| DWP (106 ton) | 1.14 | 2.58 | SDF (ton/ km2) | 42.18 | 55.47 |
| UWC (103 m3/km2) | 221.38 | 256.47 | SHL (103 ton/ km2) | 105.24 | 226.37 |
| AWS (109 m3) | 2.69 | 4.32 | SER (%) | 2% | 2.5% |
| UEC (106 kwh/ km2) | 5.12 | 7.58 | MFC (ton) | 12.34 | 13.27 |
| AES (109 kwh) | 39.54 | 72.19 | TUL (103 km2) | 26.00 | 26.00 |
| PP (106 person) | 42.19 | 59.27 |
Ecological/environmental parameters under different p levels.
| Ecological Environmental Capacity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WPC (109 ton) | 17.72 | 19.25 | 29.34 | 42.68 |
| STC (106 ton) | 146.79 | 168.95 | 198.25 | 249.67 |
| ASE (km2) | 1650.00 | 1750.00 | 1850.00 | 2050.00 |
| MFC (103 ton) | 5.45 | 6.94 | 7.89 | 10.53 |
Figure 3Optimized land-use allocation under p of 0.01 and 0.05 (k = 1).
Figure 4Optimized land-use allocation under p of 0.10 and 0.15 (k = 1).
Optimized land-use patterns under different p levels at t = 1 and k = 1.
| Land-Use Types | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [1608.8, 2176.6] | [1724.3, 2282.0] | [1743.8, 2348.3] | [1742.3, 2297.9] | |
| [721.7, 976.4] | [764.1, 1014.3] | [811.5, 1048.2] | [862.2, 1115.8] | |
| [13,303.0,17,998.1] | [13,772.5, 18,386.0] | [13,400.0, 18,074.4] | [13,088.3, 18,541.8] | |
| [515.2, 697.1] | [539.5, 718.2] | [555.2, 730.2] | [567.3, 766.4] | |
| [199.8, 270.4] | [216.3, 285.6] | [224.7, 269.2] | [229.4, 318.3] | |
| [5089.4, 6885.6] | [5448.6, 7212.8] | [5484.1, 6736.0] | [5186.1, 6139.9] | |
| [29.6, 40.1] | [27.9, 38.1] | [26.0, 35.4] | [23.9, 33.6] | |
| [730.6, 988.5] | [618.9, 872.8] | [599.0, 855.7] | [581.9, 812.9] |
Figure 5Relationship between land suitability level and system benefit.
Figure 6Relationship between p levels and system benefit.
Figure 7Relationship between λ and system benefit.