1. Introduction
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals emphasize the coordination between economic growth and ecological protection [
1]. Land use is an important element to regulate the relationship between economic growth and ecological protection. The fierce competition in land use often leads to ecosystem degradation and loss of human well-being, which is particularly evident in ecologically fragile zones [
2]. Therefore, an orderly land use and management system is the foundation of sustainable development [
3]. The agro-pastoral transitional zone (APTZ) in northern China is a comprehensive geographical transition zone and a typical ecologically fragile area, with land use exhibiting typical marginal and transitional characteristics [
4,
5]. Due to the weak stability, anti-interference ability, and restoration ability of the ecosystem in this region, the fragile natural background is prone to large-scale ecological degradation caused by human disturbance [
6]. Therefore, the relationship between humans and nature in this region has long been in a state of sharp contradiction, which becomes a key focus of sustainable development research. The contradiction between human and nature is embodied in the spatial competition of land types [
7,
8]. As a natural cover in semi-arid areas, grassland can better adapt to the regional background environment. However, due to excessive human development of grasslands, the competition between cultivated land and meadow continues to manifest, leading to a series of land degradation problems, for instance, land desertification and reduction of biodiversity [
9]. Therefore, accurately grasping the spatial competition relationship of land types and their comprehensive geographical effects in the APTZ in northern China is a crucial proposition for systematically identifying the essence of regional human–land relations.
This study of spatial competition features in land use belongs to the category of land use pattern research that aims to analyze the spatial structural representation and distribution of the methods, ownership, and degree of land use by human society at a certain scale [
10,
11,
12]. This study of land use patterns has gradually evolved from the traditional study of land use spatial structure and function to the analysis of factor coupling processes and comprehensive effects [
13,
14]. On the one hand, research has expanded into more new fields and directions, with a greater emphasis on multi-factor coupling feedback, multi-process coupling mechanism elucidation, and exploration of multi-agent collaborative governance solutions [
14,
15]. On the other hand, traditional research on land use spatial structure and function also requires new methods and innovative systems [
16]. This trend further requires that research on land use patterns should focus on the synthesis of scale effects, the construction of theoretical foundations, and the analysis of process coupling effects [
17,
18,
19]. It is also more necessary to connect with sustainable governance practices [
20]. This study of land use spatial competition is an extension and expansion of the connotation of land use pattern research [
21,
22]. Existing research is mostly based on econometric methods such as game theory models and opportunity constraint models to explore the degree of spatial competition and spatial correlation in land use, and gradually deepen study on the economic mechanism of land use competition and the game process of interest subjects [
23,
24]. The current focus of study on land use competition is on the benefits game of land use, exploring land use competition models based on economic frameworks. However, further exploration is needed on the characteristics of spatial distribution and mechanism effects of land use competition [
25]. Existing research has explored a series of mature theories and methods around the evolution of land use patterns, which can better reflect the spatial structure evolution and functional transformation of land use [
26,
27,
28,
29]. The land use center of gravity model is a relatively mature method system that is widely used to characterize the overall migration trend of land use patterns [
30]. However, further exploration is needed on how the center of gravity model relates to land use competition, which is also the key breakthrough issue of this study. There is an urgent need to construct a theoretical framework and innovate methodology in the study of land use competition mode characteristics and comprehensive geographical effects caused by competition [
31,
32,
33]. This study innovates the methodological path in analyzing land use patterns, which is closely related to the structural transformation, multifunctional evolution, and sustainability that mainstream global land science research focuses on.
The APTZ in northern China is a semi-agricultural and semi-pastoral area that transitions from semi-humid agricultural areas to semi-arid and arid pastoral areas [
34,
35]. Its land use has diversity in species, complexity in structure, spatial interlocking, and temporal alternation [
36,
37]. Previous studies have focused on analyzing regional land use competition from two perspectives: economic mechanisms and spatial patterns. In terms of economic mechanisms, the focus has been on the livelihood choices of farmers, the linkage of spatial behaviors among multiple entities, and the coordination of industrial policies [
38]. The system has systematically revealed the driving mechanisms of economic factors behind land use competition in the APTZ [
39,
40]. In terms of spatial pattern paths, existing research has focused more on the traditional analysis of land use competition structure and spatial factor functions [
41,
42,
43]. It is urgent to deepen the analysis of spatial mechanisms and comprehensive effects of comprehensive geographical elements that are highly transitional and critical in the APTZ, with the aim of revealing the spatial factor driving mechanism behind land use competition in the APTZ and serving regional sustainable development [
44]. Research suggests that the drift pattern of the center of gravity for different land use types can reflect the interweaving and competitive correlation of spatial land class distribution. This study firstly analyzes the basic characteristics of the land use pattern in the APTZ in northern China, reveals the evolutionary characteristics of the land use pattern based on the center of gravity migration model, and then attempts to explore the spatial competition relationship of land types based on the process of land use center of gravity migration. The research objective of this study is to analyze the matching relationship between the characteristics of land use pattern changes and natural background conditions. This study also aims to reveal the evolutionary trend and basic characteristics of land use in the APTZ, and provide basic reference for scientific planning of the construction of ecological barriers in northern China and achieving regional sustainable development.
4. Discussion
This study analyzed the spatial competition patterns and gradient effects of land use of the APTZ in northern China based on the drift of land use center of gravity. A methodological breakthrough has been achieved in the analysis of the spatial mechanism of land use competition and this study of spatial gradient effects. Firstly, traditional research on land use competition is based on economic mechanisms. This study analyzes the spatial mechanism of land usage competition using the spatial center of gravity model, and finds that the land use center of gravity can better reflect the interlocking nature of land types through the distance and direction factors of center of gravity migration. This method has good applicability in transitional zone areas with complex land use types. Secondly, this study analyzed the gradient effect of the center of gravity drift mode in the transition field of comprehensive geographical elements in the APTZ of northern China. It was found that the whole APTZ exhibited a typical parallel gradient effect, while the northeast and North China sections exhibited imbalanced cross gradient effects. The northwest section exhibited coordinated cross gradient effects driven by ecological policies. This study also found that the gradient effect, as a spatial distribution feature of geographical features, has a certain scale effect, which is clearly reflected in zoning studies. The APTZ did not show significant cross gradient effects throughout the region. At this macro scale, it mainly reflects the land type sawing effect between different regions within the transitional zone. The strong inter-regional sawing effect masks the cross gradient effect of land type changes within the region, thus demonstrating the scale of gradient effects. This study combines macro and meso scales using partitioning methods, respecting the differences in gradient effects at different scales.
It is worth noting that this study focused on analyzing the spatial competition relationship between farmland and grassland, and did not include forest land in the analysis system. There are three reasons for this: Forest land covers a relatively small proportion in the region and is not a typical land type; the distribution of forest land is relatively concentrated, mainly in the mountainous and hilly areas of the northeast section, and the spatial interlocking is not clearly reflected; and the utilization attributes of forest land are different from those of cultivated land and meadow, and are subject to more regulation by national engineering, regional planning, and forest and grassland policies.
The research results indicate that there is a mismatch between the migration direction of farmland in the current APTZ and the natural resource background conditions, which needs to be addressed by the management department. The continuous extension of arable land to more arid inland areas not only brings enormous water resource pressure, but also easily leads to land degradation. The contradiction between land use and natural background in terms of spatial effects still needs to be further studied in the future. The innovative application of the center of gravity model has made further attempts to answer this question.
This study has expanded the comprehensive methods for analysis of land use spatial patterns, providing strong methodological guidance for revealing the spatial effects and basic characteristics of land use in comprehensive geographic transition zones, which can be further refined in specific aspects. Firstly, the analysis and application of elements in the direction of center of gravity migration: the direction of land use center of gravity migration reflects the basic direction of spatial forces. In the future, more ecological and socio-economic factors can be coupled to analyze the dynamic mechanism of land use change, providing basic guidelines for rational planning of national land space. Secondly, research on gradient effects can further expand methods for evaluating land use suitability or sustainability. The APTZ in northern China has significant spatial element transition characteristics. Whether land use change adapts to this spatial element transition feature can be clarified by analyzing gradient effects. Future research on gradient effects can further strengthen quantitative and model automation identification and diagnosis. The innovation of this study mainly lies in expanding the methodological system of the center of gravity model, combining the forward shift characteristics of the center of gravity with natural local conditions, paying attention to the distance and direction of the forward shift of the center of gravity, and analyzing the dynamic migration characteristics of land use from a more detailed decomposition process, providing a new methodological approach for the study of land use patterns.