Affiliations: The Laboratory of Quantitative Vegetation Ecology, The
Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China
Abstract: Loess Plateau, an arid and semi-arid region in Northwest China, is
well-known for its most serious soil erosion in terms of sediment yield each
year. Soil erosion, which is intensified by agricultural activities, is the
major factor influencing sustainable agriculture development in this region. It
reduces productivity by removing nutrients and especially reducing water
availability that is essential for crop production in the area. It also brings
about off-site costs by demanding more efforts for maintenance of banks and
dams along Yellow River through raising the riverbed with sediment. Climate is
capricious and extreme weather conditions occur frequently, which impairs
normal agricultural production with erosion and also decrease of water
availability. Extensive way of farming still dominates on the Loess Plateau,
which cannot produce satisfying economic results and needs to be improved or
altered. Conventional agricultural production pattern needs to be reconsidered
for husbandry has not been granted its due position. Agriculture is the
backbone of economy. Poor agricultural production impedes economic development
and vice versa, backward economy also influences the advancement of
agriculture. Besides a large population, education status of farmers is another
threshold that requires being resolved for a sustainable agriculture.Although
conventional agriculture has been practiced there for more than 5000 years, now
it cannot meet the demand for food and fiber by the increasing population and
some of its farming practices are contributing to environmental degradation
directly or indirectly and can sustain no longer. Agriculture on Loess Plateau
needs to find its own way of sustainability. To work toward a sustainable
agriculture, chances and challenges both indwell on Loess Plateau.
Keywords: Loess Plateau, sustainable agriculture, soil erosion, water erosion, conservation practice