4.7 Article

Changing urban phosphorus metabolism: Evidence from Longyan City, China

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 536, Issue -, Pages 924-932

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.06.073

Keywords

Phosphorus; Substance flow analysis; Urban metabolism; Urbanization; China

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science & Technology of China [2011DFB91710]
  2. Science and Technology Projects of Xiamen, China [3502Z20130037]
  3. Key Laboratory of Urban Environment and Health, Institute of Urban Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences [KLUEH201108]

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Rapid worldwide urbanization calls for a better understanding of phosphorus (P) metabolism and the interaction of the physical, ecological and social drivers of P cycling in urban systems. We quantified the P metabolism in Longyan, a city with a major agricultural economy, and analyzed its long-term trends over the rapid urbanization period of 1985-2010. Both input P (from 4811 t P to 14,296 t P) and output P (from 4565 t P to 13,509 t P) increased significantly. The agricultural subsystem contributed most to the P metabolism, accounting for 85% of total P input. The share of P input lost to the environment, i.e. discharge to water, accumulation in the soil and landfill, increased from 66% to 72%, while food production efficiency decreased from 48% to 29%. Per capita P input showed linear relationships with the Human Development Index (HDI), S-curve relationship with the urbanization rate, and logistic curve relationship with per capita disposable income. A more meat-based diet shift both in Longyan and surrounding cities greatly affected Longyan's food production structure. Our results demonstrate that P metabolic quantity, configuration, and efficiency in production systems can change drastically in response to changes in consumer and producer behavior as well as in socioeconomic structure. A larger regional scale should be considered in urban P management, when trying to mitigate the increase in P use. The results also imply that sustainable urban P management will require a system-wide, cross-sector and cross-boundary approach. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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