About this Research Topic
Food security is based on the food system, and when the food system is under stress, the level of food security is reduced. This stress comes from a variety of factors, including land-use change. Land use change and its impacts have become a hotspot and frontier of global change research. With the development of human society, the structure, depth, and intensity of land use are constantly changing, which directly affects the issue of food security. There is a close relationship between regional food security and land use change. This Research Topic focuses on land use intensity change and its implications for food security.
In-depth research on the relationship between land use intensity change and food security is still needed, including relevant theories, evaluation methods, and practical studies. This collection aims to explore the process of regional land use intensity change, reveal the pattern of land use change and its driving mechanism, and focus on the impact of land use intensity change on food security, to provide strong support for ensuring food security and achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals on schedule. We will bring together relevant original research, build an academic exchange platform, and promote rigorous analysis and discussion.
The collection welcomes high-quality original research and review articles related to land use change and food security. The Research Topic will focus on the following topics, but not limited to them:
• The impact of land use intensity change on food production potential
• Sustainability of food production under intensive land use
• Risk assessment of land use intensity and food security
• Regional land use planning for intensive land use and food security
• Ecological responses to land use intensity changes and their impact on food systems
Keywords: Land Use, Intensity Change, Food Security, Food Production, Ecosystems, Sustainable Development
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.