4.6 Article

Evaluating the suitability of marginal land for a perennial energy crop on the Loess Plateau of China

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY BIOENERGY
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 1388-1406

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcbb.12865

Keywords

biomass production; fuzzy-theory-based models; land suitability; Loess Plateau; marginal land; perennial crops; switchgrass

Funding

  1. Chinese Scholarship Council
  2. National Key Project of Intergovernmental Cooperation in International Scientific and Technological Innovation [2018YFE0112400]

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This study evaluated the suitability of a perennial energy crop on marginal land in the Loess Plateau and identified approximately 2.8-4.7 million hectares of land suitable for switchgrass cultivation. The spatial suitability maps generated in this study offer valuable information for farmers and policymakers to promote a more sustainable development of biomass production.
With a large marginal land area, the Loess Plateau in China holds great potential for biomass production and environmental improvement. Identifying suitable locations for biomass production on marginal land is important for decision-makers from the viewpoint of land-use planning. However, there is limited information on the suitability of marginal land within the Loess Plateau for biomass production. Therefore, this study aims to evaluate the suitability of the promising perennial energy crop switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) on marginal land across the Loess Plateau. A fuzzy logical model was developed and validated based on field trials on the Loess Plateau and applied to the marginal land of this region, owing to its ability of dealing with the continuous nature of soil, landscape variations, and uncertainties of the input data. This study identified that approximately 12.8-20.8 Mha of the Loess Plateau as available marginal land, of which 2.8-4.7 Mha is theoretically suitable for switchgrass cultivation. These parts of the total marginal land are mainly distributed in northeast and southwest of the Loess Plateau. The potential yield of switchgrass ranges between 44 and 77 Tg. This study showed that switchgrass can grow on a large proportion of the marginal land of the Loess Plateau and therefore offers great potential for biomass provision. The spatial suitability maps produced in this study provide information to farmers and policymakers to enable a more sustainable development of biomass production on the Loess Plateau. In addition, the fuzzy-theory-based model developed in this study provided a good framework for evaluating the suitability of marginal land.

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