Dl. Zheng et al., RATES AND PATTERNS OF LANDSCAPE CHANGE BETWEEN 1972 AND 1988 IN THE CHANGBAI MOUNTAIN AREA OF CHINA AND NORTH-KOREA, Landscape ecology, 12(4), 1997, pp. 241-254
Satellite imagery was used to quantify rates and patterns of landscape
change between 1972 and 1988 in the Changbai Mountain Reserve and its
adjacent areas in the People's Republic of China and North Korea. The
190,000 ha Reserve was established as an International Biosphere Rese
rve by The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organiz
ation (UNESCO) in 1979. It is the most important natural landscape rem
aining in China's temperate/boreal climate. The images used in this re
search cover a total area of 967,847 ha, about three-fourths of which
is in China. Imagery from 1972 and 1988 was classified into 2 broad co
ver types (forest and non-forest). Overall, forests covered 84.4% of t
he study area in 1972 and 74.5% in 1988. Changes in forest cover withi
n the Reserve were minimal. The loss of forest cover outside the Reser
ve appears to be strongly associated with timber harvesting at lower e
levations. Landscape patterns in 1988 were more complex, more irregula
r, and more fragmented than in 1972. This is one of the few studies to
assess landscape changes across two countries. The rates and patterns
of forest-cover loss were different in China and North Korea. In Nort
h Korea, extensive cutting appears to have occurred prior to 1972 and
this has continued through 1988 while in China, most cutting appears t
o have occurred since 1972.