1. Introduction
Tea (
Camellia sinensis L.O. Kuntze) is a perennial evergreen shrub and a high-value-added cash crop, and it is renowned for its nutritional, medicinal, antimicrobial, and anticancer properties worldwide [
1,
2]. China is the world’s leading tea-producing country, followed by India, Kenya, and Sri Lanka [
3]. In the context of the Chinese government’s implementation of targeted poverty alleviation and rural revitalization, the tea sector has attracted the attention of government policymakers [
4]. Under benefit policies, in recent years, the tea cultivation area of China has expanded from 108.89 million hm
2 in 2000 to 298.58 million hm
2 in 2018. The vigorous development of the tea sector has created numerous employment opportunities, increased the incomes of local farmers, and increased the fiscal revenues of local governments [
5]. Although affected by the COVID-19 epidemic and low-temperature damage, China’s tea yield in 2020 was still rising. By 2020, the tea cultivation area in China reached 316.51 million hm
2, and the tea yield was 293 million tons. Tea exports in China totaled 348,800 tons, and their value was 2.038 billion dollars [
6,
7]. However, with the rapid development of China’s tea sector, some adverse effects have also been observed. On the one hand, the problem of tea overcapacity is severe with the continuous expansion of the tea planting area, especially under the influence of the COVID-19 epidemic [
5]. This phenomenon has led to unstable tea prices and caused Chinese tea to lose its price advantage and competitiveness in the international market [
8]. On the other hand, the excessive expansion of tea plantations has also had some disadvantageous effects on local ecological environments [
9]. For example, forest areas and high slopes in hilly areas have been converted into tea plantations, which has resulted in soil erosion, landslides, and floods [
10]. Such ecological disasters have been particularly prominent in newly built tea plantations. Due to the sparse vegetation and fragile ecosystem of new tea plantations, heavy rainfall can easily collapse tea plantations in areas with higher slopes [
11]. In severe cases, entire tea plantations can be destroyed, causing severe damage to local ecological environments. Moreover, drastic changes in the global climate have led to frequent extreme weather disasters, such as drought and frost events, making some tea plantations unsuitable [
12]. It is necessary to understand how the potential spatial distribution of tea plantations and the changing driving forces of the climate performance affect potential tea-growing areas, which could support tea production planning and management.
Research on the suitability of tea plantations is an essential means to avoid a blind expansion of tea plantations. It is also a meaningful way to understand the potential suitable distribution of tea plantations. Tea cultivation suitability evaluation is mainly performed by analyzing natural and human factors, such as climate, topography, soil conditions, and vegetation indices, to evaluate the potential and limitations of land use [
3]. It serves as a foundation for land resource planning and management, and appropriate land use decision making can improve the efficiency of land use and the sustainable development of the environment [
13]. However, in the early stages of tea plantation construction, there was no scientific or reasonable planning of tea plantations based on local conditions [
14]. The development of the tea industry excessively pursues short-term benefits while ignoring the sustainable development of tea plantations. With advances in information and communication technology, land suitability evaluation has been performed using geographical information systems (GISs) and satellite remote sensing techniques [
15]. In addition, essential criteria for sustainable tea production must be considered in the analytical hierarchy process (AHP) to prioritize experts’ opinions by the weight obtained from consistent GIS results [
16]. Satellite remote sensing with a GIS-based AHP is a robust tool for developing spatial decision-making processes for tea cultivation suitability analysis [
17]. According to previous studies, tea cultivation suitability evaluation has been applied in many countries. Li et al. used GISs and an improved land ecological suitability evaluation model to evaluate the land suitability of tea crops in southern China [
18]. A land suitability assessment of tea production using remote sensing, a GIS, and expert opinion in the northeastern part of Bangladesh was performed by Das [
3]. A land use assessment was conducted in Kenya on tea-growing areas, particularly in the Kirinyaga region, using the MaxEnt species distribution model [
19]. A land suitability assessment was performed on tea and orange cultivation in Nghe, Vietnam, using land suitability evaluation (LSE) software and several ecological criteria [
20]. Zhao et al. demonstrated the current and future distributions of tea species based on four SSP scenarios using the MaxEnt model in China [
13]. These studies provide information regarding the constraints of land use for tea, opportunities for decision making, and the optimal utilization of land resources. Tea cultivation suitability evaluation mainly uses GISs combined with the AHP method. Some scholars have constructed an evaluation system suitable for local areas to evaluate suitability based on the local reality. Still, the system is difficult to migrate to other places. Although the evaluation method based on GISs and AHP is more traditional, the technique is universal. Meanwhile, there are few quantitative studies on the effects of different factors on tea cultivation suitability. In particular, more effort is needed to quantify the interactions between various elements. The Geodetector model (GDM) is a new spatial analysis model developed by Wang to detect the relationship between a geographic attribute and its explanatory factors [
21]. The method is based on spatial heterogeneity theory and GIS spatial superposition technology and is designed to identify the correlations between factor and outcome variables effectively. The most significant advantage of this method is that it can effectively overcome the limitations of traditional statistical analysis methods in processing categorical variables [
22]. The model has been applied to many areas, such as work on animal habitats, geological disasters, and vegetation planting [
21,
22,
23]. The quantitative method helps to better elucidate the main constraints of tea cultivation so that they can be used as prioritized factors in the future selection of tea plantations to realize their sustainable development. Therefore, in critical tea-producing areas, tea cultivation suitability evaluation can learn the sustainable use of limited land resources, more accurately determine sites suitable for tea plantations, and improve tea yield and quality.
In the post-pandemic era, with the gradual recovery of the global economy, increasing consumption, and improvements in health-related concepts, demand for tea will continue to grow in China and internationally. In the long run, tea cultivation areas and yields will always be in a state of growth [
7]. To better plan the tea sector development of important tea-producing regions, we studied the city of Yingde, which is located in a crucial tea-growing area in South China, as our research object. Yingde is a critical black-tea-producing hub known as the “Hometown of Chinese Black Tea”. Over 60 years, the tea plantation area in the study area increased from 357 hm
2 in 1959 to 9400 hm
2 in 2019, making it the largest county-level tea-producing area in Guangdong, China [
24]. Yingde black tea has been exported to more than 70 countries and regions. The tea sector has become the mainstay of the study area, and the development of tea will directly affect the economic situation of the study area. The tea sector in the study area also faces some of the development process’s disadvantages. Therefore, considering the need for tea sector development, it is necessary to evaluate the suitability of tea cultivation. There has been no focus on assessing tea cultivation in the study area or its driving force analysis. Our paper focused on two aspects: (1) tea cultivation suitability evaluation based on remote sensing images and the AHP, and (2) GDM adoption for quantitative analysis of suitability factors. This research can help government decision makers formulate reasonable tea industry development strategies and achieve sustainable development of the tea industry.
5. Conclusions
In this study, we evaluated the cultivation suitability of tea plantations based on multiple variables, such as climate, soil, topography, and vegetation indices, using GIS, RS, and AHP methods. We also used the GDM to conduct a qualitative analysis of the driving forces behind tea tree suitability. The latest LULC data were obtained from Sentinel-2A image data; the data show that the tea plantation area in the study area covers 76.04 km2, and the user precision level was 87.78%. Fourteen factors were selected to construct an index system of tea suitability evaluation in the study area. The slope and temperature weight values were higher at 0.1631 and 0.1577, respectively. The weighted overlay using the AHP demonstrated that land covering an area of 952.69 km2 (16.91%) was highly suitable. The majority of the area (2073.94 km2) was moderately suitable land, which accounted for 36.81%. Further, 1768.82 km2 (31.40%) of generally suitable land and 914.12 km2 of the land, estimated at 16.23%, were not suitable for tea cultivation. GDM analysis showed that temperature offered the most explanatory power (0.492), followed by precipitation (0.367), slope (0.302), and altitude (0.255), contributing more than 0.255 to tea cultivation suitability, indicating that the suitability evaluation of tea plantations was mainly affected by natural factors. The present tea suitability evaluation of the studied area is of great significance to the sustainable development of the local tea industry. Therefore, land suitability assessment can profoundly impact the understanding of the future land use and production trends of tea in the study area. In the future, we will conduct a classification study of tea plantations based on multi-phase image data to obtain a higher-precision spatial distribution map of tea plantations. Meanwhile, we will carry out more objective evaluation research for tea cultivation suitability evaluation, and the evaluation results will be more instructive. We will also carry out smaller-scale research about tea cultivation suitability evaluation in the future, which can better guide tea farmers in grading tea and obtaining higher economic benefits.