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Scenario-Based Land-Use Trajectories and Habitat Quality in the Yarkant River Basin: A Coupled PLUS–InVEST Assessment

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  • Min Tian

    (College of Hydraulic and Civil Engineering, Xingjiang Agricultural University, Urumqi 830052, China)

  • Yingjie Ma

    (College of Hydraulic and Civil Engineering, Xingjiang Agricultural University, Urumqi 830052, China)

  • Qiang Ni

    (Department of Water Resources of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Institute of Water Resources Planning, Urumqi 830099, China)

  • Amannisa Kuerban

    (College of Ecology and Environment, Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang University, Urumqi 830017, China)

  • Pengrui Ai

    (College of Hydraulic and Civil Engineering, Xingjiang Agricultural University, Urumqi 830052, China)

Abstract

Land use/cover change (LUCC) is a dominant driver of ecosystem service dynamics in arid inland basins. Focusing on the Yarkant River Basin (YRB), Xinjiang, we coupled the PLUS land-use simulation with the InVEST Habitat Quality Model to project 2040 land-use patterns under four policy scenarios—Natural Development (ND), Arable Protection (AP), Ecological Protection (EP), and Economic Development (ED)—and to quantify their impact on habitat quality. Model validation against the 2020 map indicated strong agreement (Kappa = 0.792; FOM = 0.342), supporting scenario inference. From 1990 to 2023, arable land expanded by 58.17% and construction land by 121.64%, while forest land declined by 37.45%; these shifts corresponded to a basin-wide decline and increasing spatial heterogeneity of habitat quality. Scenario comparisons showed the EP pathway performed best, with 32.11% of the basin classified as very high-quality habitat and only 8.36% as very low-quality. In contrast, under ED, the combined share of very low + low quality reached 11.17%, alongside greater fragmentation. Spatially, high-quality habitat concentrates in forest and grassland zones of the middle–upper basin, whereas low-quality areas cluster along the oasis–desert transition and urban peripheries. Expansion of arable and construction land emerges as the primary driver of degradation. These results underscore the need to prioritize ecological-protection strategies especially improving habitat quality in oasis regions and strengthening landscape connectivity to support spatial planning and ecological security in dryland inland river basins.

Suggested Citation

  • Min Tian & Yingjie Ma & Qiang Ni & Amannisa Kuerban & Pengrui Ai, 2026. "Scenario-Based Land-Use Trajectories and Habitat Quality in the Yarkant River Basin: A Coupled PLUS–InVEST Assessment," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(2), pages 1-23, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:2:p:796-:d:1839442
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