The Northeast Black Soil Region is an important commercial grain production base in China. However, ecological issues such as black soil degradation and soil erosion pose direct threats to food security. Previous studies have mainly examined individual factors of black soil degradation. Few have integrated spatial thickness distribution with multi-dimensional ecological sensitivity. To address this gap, this study establishes an ecological sensitivity evaluation index system for Bayan County, located in the eastern Songnen High Plain. Based on a review of relevant literature, the system includes four dimensions: topography, climate, natural resources, and human activities. A combined Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) and Entropy Weight Method (EWM) was used to determine indicator weights. Compared with single-weighting methods, this approach balances expert judgment with data-driven variation. The results are as follows. (1) The thickness of the black soil layer in Bayan County ranges from 18 to 77 cm. Medium, thin, and thick layers account for 78.81%, 16.32%, and 4.87% of the area, respectively. The total black soil reserve is estimated at about 1.267 billion m3. (2) Among the primary indicators, natural resources have the highest weight (0.53). The five most important secondary indicators are the river buffer zone (0.14), NDVI (0.13), soil type (0.12), land use type (0.12), and road buffer zone (0.09). (3) The overall ecological sensitivity of the county is moderate, with a composite index ranging from 1.45 to 4.45. The proportions of extremely sensitive, highly sensitive, moderately sensitive, mildly sensitive, and insensitive areas are 10.79%, 25.51%, 28.95%, 24.23%, and 10.52%, respectively. These findings provide a scientific basis for ecological protection and black soil conservation. They also support the development of targeted, zone-specific management strategies in Bayan County.
Zhao et al. (Wed,) studied this question.