The pattern of abandoned cropland and its productivity potential in China: A four-years continuous study

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Apr 20:870:161928. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161928. Epub 2023 Jan 31.

Abstract

The increased requirement of food production with the rising population challenges limited cultivation land in China. The abandoned cropland has high potential in grain production to ensure China's food security. However, the spatial distributions of abandoned cropland in China are understudied and therefore it is difficult to estimate its potential grain production. Our study proposed a new definition of abandoned cropland considering unique multiple cropping systems in China, and estimate the abandoned cropland distribution and grain productivity potential by using Landsat-8 and GF-1 images under deep learning technology. The area of abandoned cropland in three main grain-producing regions was approximately 1.53 million hectares during 2014-2017. The estimated images agreed with the field survey and the national agricultural statistical data with the accuracy larger than 87 %. The spatial distribution of abandoned cropland in China was scattered and a high abandonment rate observed in the Middle-lower Yangtze River Plain. Moreover, the uncultivated cropland accounted for approximately 50 % of the total area of abandoned cropland. The maximum production potential of abandoned cropland could reach 8.5 million tons, including 2.7, 2.5 and 3.3 million tons of maize, wheat and rice, respectively. The exploitation of abandoned cropland is also beneficial for additional soybean production in China. National-scale estimation of abandoned cropland in China is crucial for land use policy making and cropland protection, as well the implementation of national food security strategy.

Keywords: Abandoned cropland; China; Productivity potential; Refining classification; Remote sensing.