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Moving toward the north: A country-level classification of land sensitivity to degradation in Czech Republic
- 1.0545630 - ÚVGZ 2022 RIV NL eng J - Journal Article
Pechanec, V. - Prokopová, Marcela - Salvati, L. - Cudlín, Ondřej - Procházka, J. - Samec, Pavel - Včeláková, Renata - Cudlín, Pavel
Moving toward the north: A country-level classification of land sensitivity to degradation in Czech Republic.
Catena. Roč. 206, NOV (2021), č. článku 105567. ISSN 0341-8162. E-ISSN 1872-6887
Research Infrastructure: CzeCOS III - 90123
Institutional support: RVO:86652079
Keywords : urban-growth * climate-change * soil-erosion * environmental degradation * socioeconomic contexts * desertification risk * agricultural land * patterns * forest * europe * esai * Desertification risk * Agricultural districts * Central-Eastern Europe * Multivariate statistics
OECD category: Agriculture
Impact factor: 6.367, year: 2021
Method of publishing: Limited access
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0341816221004252?via%3Dihub
Land sensitivity to degradation is a spatially varying attribute of local systems that experience rapid changes in socio-ecological conditions. To answer the increasing demand of quantitative risk assessment of land degradation and desertification taken as a final stage of land degradation in non-affected countries, our study estimates land sensitivity to degradation in the Czech Republic at 1:10,000 scale using the Environmental Sensitive Area (ESA) framework. Czech land was classified into four sensitivity levels ('insensitive', 'potentially sensitive', 'fragile', and 'critical'). 'Fragile' and 'critical' land concentrated in accessible lowlands with intensive agriculture. Climate and vegetation quality contributed the most to land sensitivity to degradation in the country. Low soil quality and land management quality were causes of land sensitivity in few, sparse agricultural districts. A comparison with Mediterranean and South-Eastern European countries indicates that land sensitivity to degradation in the Czech Republic is only slightly lower than in neighbouring, affected countries (sensu UNCCD, Annex IV), with the same acting drivers (agriculture intensification and urban sprawl). In light of climate change, national and regional policies are required to face with the increase of land sensitivity in 'formally non-affected' countries of Central-Eastern Europe, taking stock of the 'Mediterranean' experience in assessing and managing land sensitivity to degradation.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0322306
Number of the records: 1