Intensification of phosphorus cycling in China since the 1600s

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Mar 8;113(10):2609-14. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1519554113. Epub 2016 Feb 22.

Abstract

Phosphorus (P) is an essential nutrient for living systems with emerging sustainability challenges related to supply uncertainty and aquatic eutrophication. However, its long-term temporal dynamics and subsequent effects on freshwater ecosystems are still unclear. Here, we quantify the P pathways across China over the past four centuries with a life cycle process-balanced model and evaluate the concomitant potential for eutrophication with a spatial resolution of 5 arc-minutes in 2012. We find that P cycling in China has been artificially intensified during this period to sustain the increasing population and its demand for animal protein-based diets, with continuous accumulations in inland waters and lands. In the past decade, China's international trade of P involves net exports of P chemicals and net imports of downstream crops, specifically soybeans from the United States, Brazil, and Argentina. The contribution of crop products to per capita food P demand, namely, the P directly consumed by humans, declined from over 98% before the 1950s to 76% in 2012, even though there was little change in per capita food P demand. Anthropogenic P losses to freshwater and their eutrophication potential clustered in wealthy coastal regions with dense populations. We estimate that Chinese P reserve depletion could be postponed for over 20 y by more efficient life cycle P management. Our results highlight the importance of closing the P cycle to achieve the cobenefits of P resource conservation and eutrophication mitigation in the world's most rapidly developing economy.

Keywords: eutrophication; food production; industrial ecology; phosphorus cycling; sustainability.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms
  • Animals
  • China
  • Conservation of Natural Resources / methods
  • Conservation of Natural Resources / trends
  • Crops, Agricultural / chemistry*
  • Ecosystem*
  • Eutrophication
  • Fresh Water / chemistry*
  • Fresh Water / microbiology
  • Geography
  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Phosphorus / analysis*
  • Phosphorus / metabolism

Substances

  • Phosphorus