H53G-1730
Rapid Loss of Lakes on the Mongolian Plateau
Friday, 18 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Shengli Tao1, Jingyun Fang2, Xia Zhao3, Shuqing Zhao1, Haihua Shen3, Huifeng Hu3, Zhiyao Tang2, Zhiheng Wang2 and Qinghua Guo3, (1)Peking University, Beijing, China, (2)Peking University, Department of Ecology, Beijing, China, (3)IB Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
Abstract:
Lakes are widely distributed on the Mongolian Plateau and as critical water sources have sustained Mongolian pastures for hundreds of years. However, the plateau has experienced significant lake shrinkage and grassland degradation during the past several decades. To quantify the changes in all the lakes on the plateau and the associated driving factors, we performed a satellite-based survey using multi-temporal Landsat images from the 1970s to 2000s, combining with ground-based censuses. Our results document a rapid loss of lakes on the plateau in the past decades: the number of lakes with a water surface area >1 km
2 decreased from 785 in the late 1980s to 577 in 2010, with a greater rate of decrease (34.0%) in Inner Mongolia of China than in Mongolia (17.6%). This decrease has been particularly pronounced since the late 1990s in Inner Mongolia and the number of lakes >10 km
2 has declined by 30.0%. The statistical analyses suggested that in Mongolia precipitation was the dominant driver for the lake changes, while in Inner Mongolia coal mining was most important in its grassland area and irrigation was the leading factor in its cultivated area. The deterioration of lakes is expected to continue in the following decades not only because of changing climate but also increasing exploitation of underground mineral and groundwater resources on the plateau. To protect grasslands and the indigenous nomads, effective action is urgently required to save these valuable lakes from further deterioration.