GIES Case Study on Yunyang
Olive in Subtropical Low Mountain and Hilly Area
Hu, S.1*
Xiao, B. W.2 Lei,
M. Y.2 Ye, B.3 Qin, B.4 Chen, T.5 Han, S. B.6
Wang, X. L.7 Wang, Z. S.8 Wu, Y.9 Wang, H. T.10 Hu, S. Q.11 Yu, X. W. 11
Liu, X. L.11 Zhu,
J. Y.12 Wang, J. H.13 Xie, Y. B.12 Zhang, L.13
Zhao, Y. M.14 Liu, Z. H.1 Yuan, W. R.1
1. Institute of Geographic Science and Natural Resources
Research, Chinese Academy of Science, Beiing 100101, China;
2. Yunyang Municipality, Shiyan 442521,
China;
3. Anyang Town, Shiyan 442515, China;
4. Yangxipu Town, Shiyan 442500, China;
5. Yunyang Development and Reform
Commission, Shiyan 442521, China;
6. Yunyang Forest Bureau, Shiyan
442521, China;
7. Yunyang Agriculture and Rural
Affairs Bureau, Shiyan 442521, China;
8. Research Institute of Forestry
Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, China;
9. Wuhan Polytechnic University, Wuhan
430048, China;
10. Research Institute of Forestry
Science in Yunyang District, Shiyan 442500, China;
11. Yunyang Olive Industrial Chain
Office, Shiyan 442500, China;
12. Xinlanyuan Olive Technology Co.,
Ltd., Shiyan 442500, China;
13. Zemeng Agricultural Development
Co., Ltd., Shiyan 442500, China;
14. Hubei Provincial Olive Industrial Technology
Research Institute, Shiyan 442500, China
Abstract:
Yunyang Olive is planted in the subtropical low
mountain and hilly area of the Han River valley in Anyang Town and Yangxipu
Town of Yunyang District, Shiyan City, Hubei Province of China, with a core
area of 2,060 ha. The case area has average annual temperature of 16 ??, annual sunshine duration of 1,768 hours, and annual
precipitation of 939 mm. The soil is predominantly calcareous gravelly
yellow-brown soil, with heavy metal content remains far below the national
standard, and the area is free from soil environmental pollution. As a
designated conservation area within China??s South-to-North Water Diversion
Project, all indicators of irrigation water are below the limit values
specified in both the ??Standards
for Irrigation Water Quality?? and ??Environmental Quality Evaluation Standards
for Farmland of Edible Agricultural Products??. The case area is one of China??s twelve
pioneering experimental zone for olive introduction and cultivation since 1964,
and a set of olive cultivation practices adapted to the local climatic
conditions has been developed. This case proposes a model of core water source
area protection and sustainable development of Yuyang olives, covering their
ecological and geographical environment, product characteristics, cultivation
techniques, and industrial operation and management. The dataset includes: (1)
case study area; (2) physical geographical data; (3) olive variety
characteristics data; (4) management, economic and historical cultural
tradition data. The dataset is archived in .shp, .tif, .xlsx, .jpg, .txt and
.doc data formats, and consists of 85 data files with data size of 169 MB
(compressed into one file with 89.1 MB).
Keywords: Yunyang; olive; regional cooperation;
GIES; Case 25
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3974/geodp.2025.03.10
Dataset Availability Statement:
The dataset supporting this paper
was published and is accessible through the Digital Journal of Global Change Data Repository
at: https://doi.org/10.3974/geodb.2025.05.10.V1.
1 Introduction
China heavily relies on edible oil imports,
with over 10 million tons of vegetable oil imported in 2021, accounting for
nearly 70% of domestic consumption through international trade[1].
The olive tree (Olea europaea L.), as the only woody oil crop whose
fresh fruit can be directly cold-pressed for edible use, plays a significant
role in improving Chinese dietary health. Olive
oil, which is rich in unsaturated fatty acids, phenolic compounds, squalene,
vitamins, and other beneficial components, is known for its health benefits,
including the prevention of cardiovascular diseases, anti-cancer properties,
and anti-aging effects[2]. It has thus earned the reputation of being ??liquid
gold??. According to the China Customs Statistics Yearbook, China imported 330
tons of olive oil in 2000, 24,700 tons in 2010, approximately 35,000 tons in
2011, and up to 45,000 tons in 2022. However, domestically produced olive oil
accounted for only 11.1% of the total imports[3]. Since the 1960s,
China has initiated the introduction and cultivation of olive trees. By 1980,
in the early stage of olive tree introduction, approximately 23 million trees
had been planted across 16 southern provinces[4,5]. Since the 21st
century, the olive industry in China has developed rapidly, characterized by
regional planning, large-scale operations, and high-quality production[6].
In 2011, the total cultivated area of olive trees in China had reached about
30,000 ha[5]. By 2012, the national output of fresh olives surpassed
10,000 tons, and by 2017, it had increased to 61,900 tons, with an average
annual growth rate of 43.7%[7]. As of 2023, the total olive
cultivation area in China has expanded to 135,500 ha, with fresh fruit output
stabilizing at over 90,000 tons and olive oil production maintaining 11,000
tons[3]. With the gradual improvement of the deep-processing
industry for olives, more than 50 high value-added products in 8 major
categories have been developed, covering olive fruit, oil, leaf extracts, etc.
With rising living
standards, enhanced health awareness, and dietary restructuring, consumers are
increasingly concerned about healthy eating, particularly the safety and health
benefits of edible oils. Specialty oil crops have become high-value
agricultural products with significant commercial value, gaining strong
preference among growers and agribusinesses. Their critical role in alleviating
supply-demand imbalances in edible oils, safeguarding national grain and oil
security, and improving consumption quality is now widely recognized. Yunyang
District of Shiyan City, Hubei Province, located in the transitional zone
between the eastern extension of the Qinba Mountains and the upper-middle
reaches of the Han River, lies within the core water source area of China??s
South-to-North Water Diversion Project. In 1964, Yunyang District, as the only
trial planting area for olive trees in northwestern Hubei, planted 106 olive
saplings introduced from Albania by Premier Zhou Enlai. Thanks to government
support and active participation from local farmers, the olive cultivation area
in Yunyang reached 41.33 km2 by 2024, making it one of China??s key
olive planting and olive oil production bases. This study compiles the data and
information on the ecological environment, product characteristics, industrial
operation and management of olive cultivation in Yunyang District, Shiyan City.
Through the case dataset on the environmental conservation and sustainable
development of low mountain and hilly area in the northern subtropical zone,
the study aims to show the suitability of Yunyang??s olive habitat, product
quality, and international cooperation history, providing scientific support
for regional development and global trade.
2 Metadata of the Dataset
The
authors, geographical region, data format, and data size of the GIES case
dataset on Yunyang olive in subtropical low mountain and hilly area[8]
are presented in Table 1.
Table1 Metadata summary of the GIES
case dataset on Yunyang olive in subtropical low mountain and hilly area
|
Items
|
Description
|
|
Dataset full name
|
GIES case dataset on Yunyang olive in subtropical
low mountain and hilly area
|
|
Dataset short name
|
YunyangOliveCase25
|
|
Authors
|
Hu, S., Institute of Geographic Science and Natural
Resources Research??Chinese Academy of Science,
hus.08b@igsnrr.ac.cn
|
|
|
Wang, Z. S., Research Institute of
Forestry Chinese Academy of Forestry, w@caf.ac.cn
|
|
|
Lei, M. Y., Yunyang Municipality,
yunyang@shiyan.gov.cn
|
|
|
Ye, B., Anyang Town, yebao23@163.com
|
|
|
Qin, B., Yangxipu Town, qinbo91@163.com
|
|
|
Chen, T., Yunyang Development and Reform
Commission, 422926851@qq.com
|
|
|
Han, S. B., Yunyang Forest Bureau,
hanshibin@163.com
|
|
|
Wang, X. L., Yunyang Agriculture and Rural
Affairs Bureau, wangxianlin@163.com
|
|
|
Wu, Y., Wuhan Polytechnic University,
wuyan23@163.com
|
|
|
Hu, S. Q., Yunyang Olive Industrial Chain
Office, hushiqiang@163.com
|
|
|
Yu, X. W., Yunyang Olive Industrial Chain
Office, 335392247@qq.com
|
|
|
Liu, X. L., Yunyang Olive Industrial Chain
Office, 232349509@qq.com
|
|
|
Zhu, J. Y., Xinlanyuan Olive Technology
Co., Ltd., 8811487@qq.com
|
|
|
Wang, J. H., Zemeng Agricultural
Development Co., Ltd., 1336846274@qq.com
|
|
|
Xie, Y. B., Xinlanyuan Olive Technology Co., Ltd., 5025973@qq.com
Zhang, L., Zemeng Agricultural Development Co., Ltd.,
zl19840603@163.com
Zhao, Y. M., Hubei Provincial Olive Industrial
Technology Research Institute, zhaoxiaoyi00@ vip.qq.com
|
|
|
Liu, Z. H., Institute of Geographic Science and
Natural Resources Research??Chinese Academy of Science, liuzihan22@mails.ucas.ac.cn
|
|
|
Yuan, W. R., Institute of Geographic Science and
Natural Resources Research??Chinese Academy of Science, yuanwenrui24@mails.ucas.ac.cn
|
|
Geographical region
|
Anyang Town and Yangxipu Town, Yunyang
District, Shiyan City, Hubei Province
|
|
Data format
|
.shp, .tif, .xlsx, .jpg, .txt, .doc
|
|
Data size
|
169 MB
|
|
Data files
|
Case study area; physical geographical data; olive product
characteristics data; management, economic and historical cultural tradition
data
|
|
Data publisher
|
Global Change Research Data Publishing
& Repository, http://www.geodoi.ac.cn
|
|
Address
|
No. 11A, Datun Road, Chaoyang District,
Beijing 100101, China
|
|
Data sharing policy
|
(1) Data are openly available and can be free
downloaded via the Internet; (2) End users are encouraged to use Data
subject to citation; (3) Users, who are by definition also value-added
service providers, are welcome to redistribute Data subject to written
permission from the GCdataPR Editorial Office and the issuance of a Data
redistribution license; and (4) If Data are used to compile new
datasets, the ??ten percent principal?? should be followed such that Data
records utilized should not surpass 10% of the new dataset contents, while
sources should be clearly noted in suitable places in the new dataset[9]
|
|
Communication and searchable system
|
DOI, CSTR, Crossref, DCI, CSCD, CNKI,
SciEngine, WDS, GEOSS, PubScholar, CKRSC
|
3 Case Area
Yunyang District of Shiyan
City (32??25??N?C33??16??N, 110??07??E?C111??16??E) is located in northwestern Hubei
Province, at the junction of 3 provinces: Hubei, Henan, and Shanxi. The
district borders Henan Province to the northeast, and Baihe and Shangnan
counties of Shanxi Province to the west and north, respectively. Yunyang District
comprises 19 townships and 1 economic development zone (Figure 1), with a total
area of 3,836 km2. As the core water source area of the
South-to-North Water Diversion Project??s Middle Route, Yunyang has a water area
of 146.08 km2 in the Han River, accounting for 14% of the total area
of the Danjiangkou Reservoir and 19% of its shoreline (821.11 km). Yunyang
District is hailed as ??the Great Well of the South- to-North Water Diversion
Project, the Eternal Land of Yunyang??. Anyang Town and Yangxipu Town, which located
in the Han River valley, were selected as the case study area. Anyang Town,
with an area of 207.8 km2 and jurisdiction over 23 administrative
villages, is a traditional olive-growing area in Yunyang. Adjacent to Anyang,
Yangxipu Town covers an administrative area of 130 km2 and governs 16 administrative villages. As of 2024, the olive
cultivation areas in Anyang and Yangxipu reached 14.67 km2 and 5.93
km2, respectively.
4 Geographical and Environmental Data
4.1 Topography
Yunyang
District lies in the gently folded and sloping zone formed by the eastern
branches of the Qinling-Daba Mountains, in the lower reaches of the upper Han
River Basin. The case area, Anyang Town and Yangxipu Town, are located within
the Han River valley in the eastern of Yunyang District, with the terrain
slopes downward from north to south. Based on the analysis of SRTM (Shuttle
Radar Topography Mission) topographic data, the elevation
of the study area ranges from 0 to 1,072 m, with 87.8% of the area lying below
550 m (Figure 2). The slope varies from 0?? to 67??, of which 89% of the area has
slopes gentler than 25?? (Figure 3).

Figure 2 Map of the elevation in the case area
Figure 3 Map of the
land slope in the case area
4.2 Climatic Data
Situated
in the Han River Basin of the Qinling-Daba Mountains, Yunyang District exhibits
a unique climatic pattern integrating north subtropical continental monsoon and
localized microclimates. This results from a complex terrain-hydrology system,
the Qinling Mountains to the north create a significant barrier effect against
cold air masses from the northwest, the Daba Mountains to the south disrupt and
intercept warm-moist currents from the southwest through orographic uplift, and
the Danjiangkou Reservoir modulates regional microclimates via its massive
storage capacity.
From 1960 to 2024,
the average annual temperature in the case area was 16 ??, with mean
maximum and minimum temperatures of 21.4 ?? and 12.6 ??, respectively
(Figure 4). The annual temperature range was 23.6 ??, and the accumulated
temperature above 10 ?? was 5,139.3 ??. Unlike the Mediterranean
climate of olive??s origin, which is characterized by hot, dry summers and warm,
moist winters, the case area is characterized by hot and rainy summer. The
average daily temperature in the hottest month reaches 27.6 ??. The annual
precipitation is 939.86 mm, with approximately 114 rainy days per year.
Notably, 61.6% of the total annual precipitation occurs between May and
September, which coincides with the peak growing period for olive trees. Winters
in Yunyang are cold and dry, with January being the coldest month, averaging
4.0 ??. Precipitation during winter (December to February) accounts for
only 6.72% of the annual total. The region also enjoys abundant sunlight, with
an average of 1,768 sunshine hours per year and an average sunshine percentage
of 45.0%. The frost-free period lasts approximately 247 days annually.

Figure 4
Meteorological characteristics of Yunyang District
4.3 Land Use and NDVI Data
Based
on the analysis of 10-m spatial resolution CRLC (Cross-Resolution Land-Cover)
data[10], the study area is predominated covered by forest,
grassland, and farmland, accounting for 43.71%, 11.18%, and 34.39% of the total
area, respectively (Figure 5). Olive trees are primarily cultivated in gentle
sloping areas with elevations below 600 m and slopes less than 25 degrees
(Figure 6). A time-series analysis using Sentinel-2 remote sensing data from
2000 to 2024 reveals a general improvement in vegetation conditions in Anyang
and Yangxipu. Areas showing an increasing trend in NDVI account for as much as
92% of the total, indicating a significant enhancement in the overall
ecological environment of the case area (Figure 7).
|

|

|
|
Figure 5 Land use
map of the case area (2024)
|
Figure 6 Distribution
map of olive planting area and sampling sites in the case area
|

Figure 7
Maps of NDVI and the change rate in the case area
4.4 Soil Data
The
core olive cultivation areas in Yunyang District are dominated by calcareous
sandy yellow-brown soils with moderately low fertility. In May 2024, a total of
44 soil samples at various depths (0?C10cm, 10?C20cm, 20?C40cm, 40?C60cm, and 60?C80cm)
were collected from 9 sampling sites across the case area (Figure 6). Soil pH,
total nitrogen (g/kg), organic matter content (g/kg), available phosphorus (mg/kg),
available potassium (mg/kg), and heavy metal content (Cr, Ni, Cu,
Zn, Cd, Pb, Hg, and As) of these samples were analyzed at the Physical and
Chemical Analysis Center of the Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural
Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
The organic
matter, nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium in soil are key indicators for
assessing soil fertility. Results showed that soil pH ranged from 6.17 to 7.50
across different soil layers, with an average pH of 7.05, indicating neutral
soil conditions. The soil fertility indicators consistently exhibit a clear
surface enrichment pattern, with values decreasing progressively with soil
depth (Table 2). The soil organic matter (SOM) content ranges from 10.5 to 31.3
g/kg, with topsoil values variates between 16.9 and 31.3 g/kg. Notably, seven
ninth of sampling points in the topsoil meet the Class II soil nutrient
standards established in the Second National Soil Survey of China. The total nitrogen
(TN) content in the soils of the study area is relatively low, ranging from
0.15 to 1.48 g/kg across different soil layers. Notably, only four ninth of sampling
points in the topsoil meet the Class II standard established in the Second
National Soil Survey of China, while the remaining samples fall under Class IV
classification. The soil available phosphorus
(AP) and available potassium (AK) contents range from 12.0?C34.4 mg/kg
and 93?C193 mg/kg, respectively. In the topsoil layer, these values are notably
higher, ranging between 23.3?C34.4 mg/kg for AP and 141?C193 mg/kg for AK. All
topsoil measurements meet the Class II nutrient standards established in the Second
National Soil Survey of China.
Table 2 Testing results of primary soil fertility
indicators in the case area
|
Sample
|
Soil
depth (cm)
|
Total nitrogen (g/kg)
|
Soil
organic matter (g/kg)
|
Available
phosphorus (mg/kg)
|
Available
potassium (mg/kg)
|
|
YX-1
|
0?C10
|
1.38
|
26.1
|
33.1
|
187
|
|
10?C20
|
1.02
|
25.6
|
24.1
|
176
|
|
20?C40
|
1.02
|
22.2
|
22.8
|
142
|
|
40?C60
|
0.68
|
12.1
|
14.9
|
107
|
|
YX-2
|
0?C10
|
1.48
|
25.0
|
33.0
|
182
|
|
10?C20
|
1.33
|
24.5
|
24.5
|
154
|
|
20?C40
|
0.90
|
19.8
|
18.6
|
127
|
|
40?C60
|
0.66
|
15.8
|
17.6
|
117
|
|
60?C80
|
0.59
|
12.0
|
14.0
|
95
|
|
AY-1
|
0?C10
|
0.52
|
17.8
|
23.9
|
141
|
|
10?C20
|
0.35
|
16.8
|
23.2
|
133
|
|
20?C40
|
0.22
|
15.9
|
18.8
|
125
|
|
40?C60
|
0.19
|
14.9
|
15.3
|
111
|
|
60?C80
|
0.28
|
10.5
|
15.1
|
97
|
|
AY-2
|
0?C10
|
0.48
|
16.9
|
30.0
|
143
|
|
10?C20
|
0.31
|
16.3
|
23.9
|
133
|
|
20?C40
|
0.31
|
15.1
|
17.8
|
121
|
|
40?C60
|
0.28
|
11.8
|
17.1
|
101
|
|
60?C80
|
0.20
|
11.3
|
14.0
|
97
|
|
AY-3
|
0?C10
|
0.61
|
21.7
|
34.3
|
146
|
|
10?C20
|
0.22
|
19.5
|
23.9
|
133
|
|
20?C40
|
0.18
|
15.7
|
19.0
|
120
|
|
40?C60
|
0.15
|
13.2
|
15.3
|
113
|
|
60?C80
|
0.16
|
11.8
|
13.7
|
111
|
|
AY-4
|
0?C10
|
0.68
|
22.1
|
30.9
|
152
|
|
10?C20
|
0.68
|
18.8
|
23.7
|
145
|
|
20?C40
|
0.39
|
15.9
|
19.3
|
118
|
|
40?C60
|
0.39
|
15.2
|
18.4
|
108
|
|
60?C80
|
0.37
|
13.2
|
13.7
|
97
|
|
AY-5
|
0?C10
|
0.67
|
23.3
|
23.3
|
155
|
|
10?C20
|
0.68
|
22.2
|
22.7
|
146
|
|
20?C40
|
0.56
|
20.5
|
17.1
|
133
|
|
40?C60
|
0.68
|
14.9
|
15.8
|
108
|
|
60?C80
|
0.57
|
13.1
|
13.3
|
94
|
|
AY-6
|
0?C10
|
1.22
|
27.0
|
25.0
|
181
|
|
10?C20
|
0.91
|
24.6
|
24.3
|
160
|
|
20?C40
|
0.54
|
19.6
|
21.9
|
132
|
|
40?C60
|
0.53
|
15.1
|
16.9
|
104
|
|
60?C80
|
0.56
|
13.1
|
12.0
|
93
|
|
AY-7
|
0?C10
|
1.03
|
31.3
|
34.4
|
193
|
|
10?C20
|
0.87
|
23.7
|
25.5
|
154
|
|
20?C40
|
0.60
|
22.2
|
20.8
|
137
|
|
40?C60
|
0.66
|
15.8
|
17.8
|
101
|
|
60?C80
|
0.67
|
13.2
|
13.7
|
107
|
The results of the
heavy metal analysis of soil samples from the case area show that the contents
of 8 heavy metals, Cr, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb, Hg, and As, were significantly lower
than the risk screening values stipulated in both the ??Pollution-free food??environmental
conditions for fruit (NY 5013??2006)?? [11] and the ??Soil
environmental quality risk control standard for soil contamination of
agricultural land (Trial) (GB 15618??2018)?? [12] (Table 3). No
residues of organochlorine pesticides such as hexachlorocyclohexane (BHC) and
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) were detected in the soil, conforming to
the risk screening values for ??other items?? stipulated in the ??Soil
environmental quality risk control standard for soil contamination of
agricultural land (Trial) (GB 15618??2018)?? [12] (both BHC and DDT
limits are 0.1 mg/kg).
Table
3 Soil heavy metal content in the case area Unit: mg/kg
|
Sample
|
Soil
depth (cm)
|
As
|
Cd
|
Pb
|
Cr
|
Ni
|
Cu
|
Zn
|
Hg
|
|
YX-1
|
0?C10
|
4.14
|
0.15
|
15.23
|
113.69
|
64.36
|
44.57
|
112.80
|
0.00
|
|
10?C20
|
3.23
|
0.11
|
14.94
|
112.95
|
63.94
|
45.01
|
110.58
|
0.05
|
|
20?C40
|
3.56
|
0.19
|
14.56
|
113.08
|
64.18
|
44.28
|
111.24
|
0.11
|
|
40?C60
|
2.14
|
0.10
|
14.12
|
112.86
|
63.28
|
44.37
|
110.84
|
0.09
|
|
YX-2
|
0?C10
|
14.23
|
0.10
|
28.15
|
91.17
|
43.41
|
22.67
|
110.43
|
0.00
|
|
10?C20
|
14.15
|
0.08
|
27.98
|
90.25
|
42.18
|
23.01
|
108.24
|
0.01
|
|
20?C40
|
13.00
|
0.08
|
27.62
|
91.02
|
43.07
|
22.85
|
109.78
|
0.01
|
|
40?C60
|
11.75
|
0.09
|
28.02
|
90.46
|
43.14
|
22.41
|
108.88
|
0.00
|
|
60?C80
|
11.20
|
0.07
|
27.04
|
89.78
|
42.97
|
22.49
|
109.07
|
0.00
|
|
AY-1
|
0?C10
|
5.52
|
0.18
|
1.12
|
114.37
|
56.50
|
27.80
|
153.89
|
0.00
|
|
10?C20
|
5.78
|
0.11
|
1.27
|
113.56
|
55.27
|
26.25
|
150.27
|
0.00
|
|
20?C40
|
4.96
|
0.15
|
1.02
|
114.01
|
56.04
|
24.41
|
149.51
|
0.00
|
|
40?C60
|
4.98
|
0.14
|
0.99
|
113.98
|
55.91
|
25.21
|
151.41
|
0.01
|
|
60?C80
|
4.32
|
0.14
|
1.05
|
113.26
|
55.83
|
23.49
|
152.19
|
0.01
|
|
AY-2
|
0?C10
|
0.00
|
0.19
|
0.99
|
100.12
|
50.27
|
36.01
|
152.40
|
0.00
|
|
10?C20
|
0.00
|
0.18
|
1.02
|
99.47
|
50.12
|
35.05
|
148.24
|
0.00
|
|
20?C40
|
0.00
|
0.15
|
1.01
|
99.17
|
48.94
|
34.74
|
149.74
|
0.00
|
|
40?C60
|
0.00
|
0.15
|
0.95
|
98.75
|
49.25
|
35.61
|
150.16
|
0.00
|
|
60?C80
|
0.00
|
0.12
|
0.89
|
99.01
|
49.84
|
35.31
|
147.89
|
0.00
|
|
AY-3
|
0?C10
|
4.69
|
0.04
|
0.00
|
101.44
|
47.96
|
48.91
|
142.50
|
0.00
|
|
10?C20
|
4.71
|
0.05
|
0.00
|
99.58
|
47.03
|
50.03
|
140.21
|
0.00
|
|
20?C40
|
3.98
|
0.03
|
0.00
|
100.76
|
47.18
|
47.57
|
139.57
|
0.00
|
|
40?C60
|
4.18
|
0.04
|
0.00
|
100.12
|
46.56
|
48.59
|
141.18
|
0.00
|
|
60?C80
|
4.25
|
0.02
|
0.00
|
100.01
|
46.81
|
48.78
|
138.25
|
0.00
|
|
AY-4
|
0?C10
|
18.26
|
0.00
|
29.56
|
98.10
|
47.89
|
48.08
|
136.58
|
0.00
|
|
10?C20
|
22.03
|
0.00
|
30.12
|
98.59
|
47.05
|
47.92
|
134.14
|
0.00
|
|
20?C40
|
19.29
|
0.00
|
31.20
|
97.56
|
47.27
|
47.56
|
133.78
|
0.00
|
|
40?C60
|
18.25
|
0.00
|
30.11
|
97.78
|
46.82
|
47.10
|
134.94
|
0.00
|
|
60?C80
|
18.15
|
0.00
|
29.98
|
97.21
|
47.14
|
46.57
|
135.10
|
0.00
|
|
AY-5
|
0?C10
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
15.92
|
87.15
|
39.15
|
41.87
|
123.90
|
0.03
|
|
10?C20
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
15.88
|
87.00
|
39.00
|
40.52
|
119.54
|
0.04
|
|
20?C40
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
15.12
|
86.81
|
39.07
|
41.71
|
121.45
|
0.02
|
|
40?C60
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
15.47
|
86.95
|
38.58
|
41.02
|
120.89
|
0.03
|
|
60?C80
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
15.29
|
86.17
|
38.71
|
40.41
|
119.12
|
0.03
|
|
AY-6
|
0?C10
|
2.03
|
0.00
|
33.26
|
98.01
|
43.59
|
29.84
|
114.29
|
0.01
|
|
10?C20
|
1.75
|
0.00
|
32.93
|
97.54
|
42.81
|
28.85
|
112.22
|
0.02
|
|
20?C40
|
1.84
|
0.00
|
33.01
|
97.18
|
42.99
|
28.41
|
110.42
|
0.01
|
|
40?C60
|
1.56
|
0.00
|
32.89
|
97.09
|
42.53
|
29.01
|
109.85
|
0.01
|
|
60?C80
|
1.78
|
0.00
|
32.74
|
97.16
|
42.17
|
28.74
|
110.01
|
0.02
|
|
AY-7
|
0?C10
|
4.56
|
0.00
|
17.95
|
74.84
|
33.86
|
33.29
|
115.56
|
0.00
|
|
10?C20
|
4.17
|
0.00
|
17.81
|
73.95
|
33.47
|
33.01
|
116.12
|
0.00
|
|
20?C40
|
4.23
|
0.00
|
17.52
|
74.18
|
33.89
|
32.57
|
112.31
|
0.00
|
|
40?C60
|
3.98
|
0.00
|
17.61
|
73.85
|
33.10
|
32.95
|
110.45
|
0.00
|
|
60?C80
|
3.84
|
0.01
|
17.05
|
73.94
|
33.27
|
32.74
|
111.84
|
0.00
|
|
Limit 1[11]
|
|
??30
|
??0.3
|
??300
|
??200
|
?C
|
?C
|
?C
|
??0.5
|
|
Limit 2[12]
|
|
??30
|
??0.3
|
??120
|
??200
|
??100
|
??100
|
??250
|
??2.4
|
4.5 Water Quality Data
Yunyang
District contains a total of 766 rivers and streams, with a combined length of
3,351 km. Major rivers include the Han River, Tao River, Du River, Quyuan
River, and Jiangjun River. In 2022 and
2023, the total water resources in the entire region were 781 million m3
and 1.618 billion m3 respectively. In Anyang Town, the total surface
water resources were 40.27 million m3 and 92.26 million m3,
with water yield modulus of 19.3??104 m3/km2 and 44.1??104 m3/km2
respectively. In Yangxipu Town, the total surface water resources were 33.13
million m3 and 73.80 million m3, with water yield modulus
of 22.2??104 m3/km2
and 49.5??104 m3/km2
respectively. Although olive trees prefer drought conditions and are sensitive
to waterlogging, their water needs mainly depend on precipitation.
Nevertheless, the abundant water resources in the region can effectively
supplement the water demand during dry seasons.
As a core water
source area of the South-to-North Water Diversion Project, water quality at 8
national and provincial monitoring sections in Yunyang District has consistently
maintained at or above Class III standards, with 5 key sections sustaining
long-term compliance with Class II standards for high-quality water bodies. In
May 2024, 6 sampling sites were established in the case area (Figure 6), where
river and irrigation water samples were collected. According to the
Environmental quality evaluation standards for farmland of edible agricultural products
(HJ/T 332??2006)[13] and the Standard for irrigation water quality
(GB 5084??2021)[14], irrigation water quality is tested for both
basic control items and selective control items. Water test results show that
sample pH values ranged from 6.59 to 7.67 (Table 4). All 16 basic control
indicators, including water temperature, suspended solids, five-day biochemical
oxygen demand (BOD5), chemical oxygen demand (COD), anionic
surfactants, chlorides, sulfides, total salt, total lead (Pb), total
cadmium (Cd), chromium (hexavalent), total mercury (Hg),
total arsenic (As), fecal coliform count, and ascaris lumbricoides egg count,
as well as 4 selective control indicators (total copper (Cu), total zinc (Zn),
total selenium (Se), and total boron (B)) were below the limit values specified
in both the HJ/T 332??2006 and the GB 5084??2021 (Table 4). All the
indicators except total selenium (Se) fully comply with the Standards for
drinking water quality (GB 5749??2022) [15].
5 Olive Characteristics Data
5.1 Olive Varieties
Olive
(Olea europaea L.) is an evergreen
economic tree species belonging to the genus Olea in the family Oleaceae. It is one of the
world??s 4 major woody oil crops. Originating from the Mediterranean region,
olive trees are now cultivated in dozens of countries and regions worldwide.
Yunyang District is located within the secondary suitable cultivation zone for
olive in the middle and lower Yangtze River Basin[16]. The main
varieties include Arbequina, Miracle, Arbosana, Ezhi No. 8, Picual, and
Picholine. Among them, Picual, Picholine, and Arbequina occupy a large planting
area (Figure 8).
Variety 1:
Arbequina. Also known as Abiquina or
Abekina, Arbequina is an internationally recognized olive variety characterized
by early fruiting, stable yields, and high productivity. This variety has a
high self-pollination rate, with fruit ripening relatively early in late
October. The dry fruit oil content is around 48.04%, and fresh fruit oil
content is about 26.00%, producing a mildly flavored olive oil. Arbequina has
strong stress resistance, including cold tolerance, salt-alkali tolerance, high
humidity resistance, and resistance to olive leaf spot and olive knot diseases.
However, this variety is highly sensitive to soil calcium and grows poorly in
acidic or calcium-deficient soils.
Table 4 Water quality data in the case area
|
Test item
|
YX-1
|
YX-2
|
AY-1
|
AY-2
|
AY-3
|
AY-4
|
Limit 1[13]
|
Limit 2[14]
|
Limit 3[15]
|
|
pH
|
6.72
|
6.59
|
7.67
|
7.27
|
7.25
|
7.2
|
5.5?C8.5
|
5.5?C8.5
|
6.5?C8.5
|
|
Water temperature
(??)
|
26.4
|
28.6
|
27.6
|
27.9
|
28.9
|
26.5
|
35
|
35
|
?C
|
|
Suspended solids
(mg/L)
|
10
|
9
|
8
|
12
|
12
|
14
|
?C
|
100
|
?C
|
|
Five-day biochemical
oxygen demand
(BOD5) (mg/L)
|
4.60
|
4.20
|
4.80
|
4.70
|
4.20
|
5.10
|
80
|
100
|
?C
|
|
Chemical oxygen
demand (COD) (mg/L)
|
16.00
|
15.00
|
21.00
|
17.00
|
14.00
|
25.00
|
?C
|
200
|
?C
|
|
Anionic
surfactants (mg/L)
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
?C
|
8
|
?C
|
|
Chlorides (mg/L)
|
8.500
|
8.100
|
9.400
|
8.700
|
7.900
|
10.800
|
350
|
350
|
250
|
|
Sulfides (mg/L)
|
0.05
|
0.06
|
0.07
|
0.07
|
0.05
|
0.09
|
1.0
|
1.0
|
?C
|
|
Total salt (mg/L)
|
165
|
201
|
184
|
157
|
152
|
246
|
1,000
|
1,000
|
?C
|
|
Total lead (mg/L)
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
0.2
|
0.2
|
0.01
|
|
Total cadmium
(mg/L)
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
0.01
|
0.01
|
0.005
|
|
Chromium
(hexavalent) (??g/L)
|
0.200
|
0.000
|
0.100
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
100
|
100
|
50
|
|
Total mercury (mg/L)
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
0.001
|
0.001
|
0.001
|
|
Total arsenic (??g/L)
|
1.100
|
2.500
|
0.000
|
3.000
|
4.300
|
0.010,3
|
100
|
100
|
10
|
|
Fecal coliform
count (MPN/L)
|
284
|
347
|
256
|
312
|
284
|
490
|
40,000
|
40,000
|
?C
|
|
Ascaris lumbricoides
egg count (pcs/10L)
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
Not detected
|
20
|
20
|
?C
|
|
Total copper (??g/L)
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.000
|
0.500
|
0.600
|
1,000
|
1,000
|
1,000
|
|
Total zinc (??g/L)
|
5.400
|
2.300
|
9.900
|
10.200
|
2.600
|
1.700
|
2,000
|
2,000
|
1,000
|
|
Total selenium (??g/L)
|
3.200
|
13.000
|
18.000
|
8.700
|
9.000
|
14.700
|
20
|
20
|
10
|
|
Total boron (mg/L)
|
0.003,8
|
0.003,0
|
0.005,3
|
0.002,1
|
0.021,3
|
0.012,1
|
1.0
|
1.0
|
1.0
|
|
Arbequina
|
Picual
|
Picholine
|
|

|

|

|
|

|

|

|
Figure 8
Major olive varieties in Yunyang
Variety 2: Picual. Picual is a world-famous olive variety known
for its high oleic acid content. It has strong early fruiting characteristics,
typically flowering and fruiting around 5 years after planting. Picual can
self-pollinate with a high fruit set rate. Its fruit matures relatively late,
generally in mid to late November. Dry fruit oil content ranges from 42.78% to
43.20%, while fresh fruit oil content ranges from 20.63% to 23.81%, producing a
robustly flavored olive oil. Picual demonstrates remarkable cold resistance
(tolerant to temperatures as low as ?C10 ??), salt-alkali tolerance, and
flood tolerance but is sensitive to drought. High temperature and humidity in
summer can cause leaf drop. It is resistant to olive knot and olive anthracnose
diseases.
Variety 3:
Picholine. Originally from France, Picholine is a dual-purpose variety used for
both oil and table olives. It has a low self-fruit set rate, but fruit set can
be significantly improved through cross-pollination, with a notable alternate
bearing pattern. The dry fruit oil content ranges from 34.1% to 43.27%, and
fresh fruit oil content ranges from 18% to 20%, producing a robustly flavored
olive oil. Picholine is highly adaptable to various environments, preferring
sunny and drought conditions. It has strong cold tolerance, is resistant to
poor soils, favors calcareous soils, but is sensitive to waterlogging and soils
with poor permeability. Additionally, it shows high resistance to Peacock Spot Disease.
5.2 Yunyang Olive Quality Data
Quality
assessment data of Yunyang olives indicate that oleic acid (monounsaturated
fatty acid) contents in 3 main cultivars (Picual, Picholine, and Arbequina)
reaches 64.53%?C77.74%, while the linoleic acid (polyunsaturated fatty acid)
content ranges from 3.32% to 12.20% (Table 5). Monounsaturated fatty acids play
a role in regulating low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol metabolism,
while linoleic acid, an essential fatty acid for humans, is involved in cell
membrane construction and immune regulation[17]. These factors
largely explain the lipid-regulating and immune-modulating functions of olive
oil. Laboratory analysis of olive oil, the primary product of olive fruit,
indicates a polyphenol content of 273.00 mg/kg. Meanwhile, the polyphenol
content in commercially available domestic extra virgin olive oils ranges from
63.885 to 307.325 mg/kg[18]. The EU standard stipulates that olive
oil is considered beneficial to human health only when its polyphenol content
exceeds 250 mg/kg[19]??
Table 5 Quality data of olive
|
|
Picual
|
Picholine
|
Arbequina
|
|
|
Mean (%)
|
Range (%)
|
Mean (%)
|
Range (%)
|
Mean (%)
|
Range (%)
|
|
Oleic acid
|
76.37
|
75.9?C77.0
|
77.47
|
77.1?C77.8
|
64.53
|
63.4?C65.4
|
|
Linoleic acid
|
5.88
|
5.56?C6.13
|
3.32
|
3.12?C3.54
|
12.20
|
11.8?C12.8
|
|
??-linolenic acid
|
0.989
|
0.967?C1.01
|
0.884
|
0.865?C0.894
|
0.921
|
0.916?C0.926
|
|
Palmitic acid
|
12.90
|
12.7?C13.1
|
13.60
|
13.5?C13.7
|
17.07
|
16.8?C17.4
|
|
Palmitoleic acid
|
1.31
|
1.23?C1.40
|
2.04
|
2.00?C2.06
|
2.84
|
2.65?C3.02
|
|
Stearic acid
|
1.77
|
1.74?C1.80
|
2.09
|
2.06?C2.11
|
1.74
|
1.71?C1.77
|
|
Arachidic acid
|
0.390
|
0.383?C0.395
|
0.349
|
0.347?C0.351
|
0.386
|
0.380?C0.391
|
Laboratory analysis
of olive oil from the case area revealed no detectable levels of heavy metals
(including total arsenic and lead), fully compliant with National food safety
standard??edible vegetable oil (GB 2762??2018)[20]. Additionally, no
residues from 375 pesticides (e.g., chlorpyrifos and trichlorfon) were
detected, meeting the requirements of National food safety standard??maximum
residue limits for pesticides in food (GB 2763?? 2021)[21].
6 Management of the Olive Industry
6.1 Socio-Economic Development of Yunyang District
According
to statistics, the total population of Yunyang District from 2021 to 2023 was
617,700[22], 616,000[23], and 614,000[24] respectively.
During this period, urban permanent residents ranged between 197,700 and
213,800, and rural permanent residents ranged between 181,800 and 197,500. The
urbanization rates for each year were 50.01%, 51.26%, and 54.04% respectively.
From 2021 to 2023, the Gross Regional Product of the district reached 20.058
billion CNY[22], 23.616 billion CNY[23], and 23.0006
billion CNY[24], respectively. The industrial structure ratios (primary:secondary:tertiary)
for each year were 18:44:38 in 2021, 16.5:49.1:34.4 in 2022 and 17.25:41.7:41
in 2023. The proportion of the tertiary industry showed an annual increasing
trend during this period. In 2023, the per capita disposable income of urban
residents reached 36,484 CNY, representing an annual increasing rate of 5.4%,
while that of rural residents stood at 15,675 CNY, up 8.0% from the previous
year. Consequently, the urban-rural income ratio narrowed from 2.385:1 in 2022
to 2.328:1[24].
The population in
the case study area remains stable with a consistent annual increase in per
capita disposable income. From 2021 to 2023, Anyang Town recorded populations
of 25,866, 25,872, and 25,360, with permanent residents numbering 12,426,
11,231, and 11,137 respectively, and per capita disposable incomes of 12,980,
13,487, and 14,876 CNY. Yangxipu Town reported populations of 38,527, 38,509,
and 38,502 during the same period, with per capita disposable incomes of
13,389, 14,541, and 15,675 CNY.
6.2 Development History of the Olive Industry
The
olive tree (Olea europaea L.), a
globally renowned woody oil crop, originated in the Mediterranean region and
boasts over 6,000 years. In 1964, Premier Zhou Enlai introduced 10,680 olive
tree saplings from Albania, which were then cultivated in 12 pilot sites across
8 China??s provinces, including Yunnan, Sichuan, Guizhou, and Hubei, etc., for
experimental planting. The development of the olive industry in Yunyang
District has evolved in tandem with China??s national olive introduction
journey, undergoing 5 critical phases, introduction and trial planting period, decline
and bottleneck period, spontaneous cultivation period, recovery and development
period, and leading development period.
In 1973, the Hubei Academy of Forestry Sciences selected Erwan Forest
Farm in Anyang Town, Yunyang District as the sole olive introduction trial zone
in northwestern Hubei. During the same period, the Yun
County Forestry Research Institute conducted cutting propagation work
at the Erwan Forest Farm. By 1984, the experimental area recorded an
average yield of 18.23 kg per plant, with the highest single-plant yield
exceeding 82 kg, marking the successful introduction and trial of olive trees
in Yunyang District. However,
following the implementation of the household-based land contracting system in
1980s, olive planting bases fell into widespread management neglect due to the
absence of fresh fruit procurement channels, insignificant economic benefits,
and limited public awareness. This led to tree mortality and the abandonment of
cultivation bases. In the early 1990s, Chinese Academy of Forestry conducted
systematic research on high and stable yield techniques in Yunyang,
establishing the first high-yield cultivation demonstration orchard. In
2006, some olive growers spontaneously introduced olive saplings from Longnan,
Gansu and Xichang, Sichuan, and then established the region??s first olive
cooperative, ??Jinhanjiang Olive Cooperative?? in 2007, forming a small-scale
planting cluster. In May 2018, the Yunyang District Olive Industry Alliance was
established. In May 2022, the Yunyang District Government innovatively
established the Committee for the olive oil industry chain, coordinating
industrial technology breakthroughs and standardized development. At the same
year, the district??s olive industry achieved an initial harvest, a total
industrial chain value reaches 150 million CNY and tax revenue exceeding 4
million CNY.
6.3 Olive Cultivation and Management
The
olive tree (Olea europaea L.),
characterized by drought tolerance, photophilous nature, cold sensitivity, and
waterlogging intolerance, thrives in alkaline sandy soils. Large-scale
introduction of this species in China has occurred only within the past six
decades. By adopting adaptive cultivation models such as ??soil-ridge planting??
and ??raised-bed cultivation??, and implementing refined management aligned with
the principle of ??Only 10% is about planting, the remaining 90% lies in
management?? for olive trees, Yunyang District has pioneered the ??Yunyang
Model??, effectively overcame constraints including high-temperature humidity
climates and clay-heavy soils.
(1) Establish a seedling breeding system
Vigorously promote
the Picual, Picholine, and Arbequina. To enhance frost resistance,
high-altitude areas should be supplemented with freezing-resistant varieties
such as Leccino, Low-altitude areas should be supplemented with
oil-quality-focused varieties like Frantoio.
(2) Soil-ridge cultivation model
Yunyang District
fully promotes the ??Soil-ridge cultivation model??, which advantages include
facilitating drainage and waterlogging prevention, improving soil aeration and
oxygenation, accelerating root system development, preventing root rot and
suffocation, optimizing soil aggregate structure, and increasing soil organic
matter content. Soil-Ridge cultivation techniques include high-wide ridge cultivation,
trench digging-backfilling- ridge cultivation, monolithic mounded soil planting,
and convex-shaped cultivation. High-wide ridge cultivation is for flat and open
field, the whole-field deep tillage method is adopted for ridge formation. For
gentle slopes and terraced fields, a method of digging trenches, backfilling
with organic matter, and forming ridges is adopted. For small or irregularly
shaped terrains unsuitable for conventional ridge cultivation, the monolithic
mounded soil planting method is adopted. For areas with high groundwater levels
or seasonal waterlogging, adopt a combined model of high-wide ridges and
monolithic mounds, colloquially termed ??convex-shaped cultivation??.
(3) Management
??Only 10% is about
planting, the remaining 90% lies in management?? for olive cultivation. Yunyang
District has enacted the Technical guidelines for year-round maintenance of newly
planted olive seedlings, establishing a scientific management system covering
weeding, pest and disease control, fertilization, and soil conservation. After
fruit harvesting each autumn or winter, trench expansion must be performed
around the periphery of the original planting pit or the crown drip line. Basal
fertilization primarily consists of fully decomposed organic manure.
Supplemental fertilization focuses on nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, with
additional calcium and boron applied as needed. The timing and frequency of
irrigation are determined based on local climatic conditions. Adequate water
supply is essential during key phenological stages, including floral bud
differentiation, flowering and fruit setting, fruit enlargement, and stone
hardening. Supplemental irrigation is necessary during dry
periods in winter and spring to maintain optimal soil moisture. Pruning during
the growing season should be completed between the emergence of new shoots and
the onset of summer. Dormant season pruning is typically carried out after
fruit harvest and before bud break in the following spring to improve canopy
ventilation and light penetration. Olive pest management adheres to the
principle of ??Prevention first, integrated control followed??. Under
high-temperature and high-humidity conditions that favor the occurrence of
pests such as large-grooved weevil and longhorn beetles, and diseases like
anthracnose, it employs low-toxicity, low-residue, and eco-friendly methods.
(4) Fresh fruits time-limited picking
Olive oil is
extracted through time-constrained cold-pressing of fresh fruits. To ensure the
freshness, olives must be manually harvested, subjected to rigorous fruit
selection, processed with washing and sterilization, and pressed within 12
hours post-harvest for oil extraction and storage.
6.4 Industry Development and Management
The olive industry has been
identified as a strategic pillar of Yunyang District??s rural revitalization
agenda, receiving strong policy support from provincial, municipal, and
district levels. Hubei Province has issued key policy documents such as the
Decision on accelerating the greening of Jingchu and the Implementation opinions
on deepening rural reform and advancing rural revitalization, which categorize
woody oil crops, including olives, as regionally distinctive and advantageous
industries and foundational to ecological afforestation and rural prosperity.
Shiyan City has incorporated olives into one of its 7 major agricultural
industrial chains and issued policies such as the Opinions on fostering leading
agricultural enterprises to accelerate olive development in Yunyang,
Danjiangkou, and Yunxi. Yunyang District has designated the olive industry as
one of its 3 primary agricultural pillars, with cumulative investments totaling
120 million CNY.
Yunyang District established the Committee for the olive oil industry chain,
adopting a ??industry chain + township governments + leading enterprises + market
entities?? model, establishing a modernized full-industry-chain model centered
on the ??self-sufficient seedling propagation system??, ??standardized planting
base??, and ??deep processing system??, to achieve dual ecological and economic
benefits. By the end of 2024, the cultivation area
reached 41.33 km2, forming an industrial layout with Anyang and
Yangxipu as core production zones, extending to 9 townships including Qingshan,
Meipu, Tanshan, Chengguan, Liubei, Wufeng, etc. The district has nurtured 51
market entities, including 1 national-level leading enterprise in agricultural
industrialization (Xinlanyuan Olive Technology Co., Ltd.), 1 leading forestry
enterprise, and 5 provincial-level leading forestry enterprises. In 2024, the
industry benefited 12,000 residents with an average annual income increase of
30,000 CNY per household, achieving a total output exceeding 450 million CNY.
6.5 Near Real-Time Monitoring
System for Olive Trees
To achieve real-time monitoring of the olive
tree habitat in Yunyang, a low-power IoT sensing system, the Yunyang olive GIES
smart IoT information system (Figure 9), was deployed in May 2025 at the Dongfang
Olive Garden in Yangxipu Town, Yunyang District. This system simultaneously
observes and records 16 environmental parameters, including air temperature,
humidity, rainfall, atmospheric pressure, negative oxygen ions, wind speed,
wind direction, total solar radiation, PM10, PM2.5,
atmospheric CO2 concentration, noise levels, soil temperature, soil
moisture at different depths, while transmitting real-time imagery of olive
trees.
7 Discussion and Conclusion
The unique northern
subtropical low-mountain hilly environment of the case area has fostered the
development of Yunyang olive with distinct regional geographic characteristics.
As a high value-added woody oil crop, olive holds broad development prospects, yet
it requires strengthened government support, scientific research investment,
and market promotion.
7.1 Deepening Technological
Innovation to Enhance Industrial Economic Efficiency
China??s
olive cultivation history is relatively short, with inadequate technical
reserves and incomplete understanding of its physiological and ecological
traits. To advance high-quality development of the olive industry, it is
imperative to establish an industrial technical guidance group based on
existing expert workstations, focusing on breakthroughs in core technologies
for base cultivation and deep processing. Implement a ??industry-university- research-application??
collaborative innovation plan, allocate dedicated R&D funds, and build
mechanisms for talent incentives and service mobility to cultivate technical
innovators, skilled practitioners, and management teams. Develop a ??non-profit
& socialized?? industrial technology service platform, organizing seasonal
rotational guidance by local agronomists and technical teams to train localized
planting technicians through on-site instruction.
7.2 Strengthen Market Supervision
to Enhance the Influence of Domestic Brands
Olive
oil is the primary product derived from olive fruits. Currently, China??s olive
oil market faces chaotic practices, with supermarkets predominantly selling
imported products, only less than 40% are virgin grades, while the rest
comprise refined olive oil, olive-pomace oil, or blended oils. This undermines
the price competitiveness of authentic domestic extra virgin olive oil, causing
sales difficulties and operational challenges for local growers and processors.
To address this, it is imperative to accelerate full implementation of the
National Standard for olive oil and olive-pomace oil (GB/T 23347??2021)[24],
strictly enforce product classification and labeling rules, prohibiting the
designation of olive-pomace oil as ??olive oil??, mandate labeling of olive fruit
harvest dates and repackaging dates, establish a whole-chain quality
traceability system. Furtherly, it should regulate the olive oil market through
national standards to enhance the influence of domestic brands.
Author Contributions
Hu, S. made the overall
design of the case; Xiao, B. W., Lei, M. Y., Ye, B., Qin, B., Chen, T., Han, S.
B. and Wang, X. L. provided ecological and environmental data of the case area;
Wang, Z. S., Wu, Y., Wang, H. T., Hu, S. Q., Yu, X, W., Liu, X. L., Zhu, J. Y.,
Wang, J. H., Xie, Y. B., Zhang, L. and Zhao, Y. M. contributed data on olive
product characteristics, cultivation management, and industrial operations. Hu,
S., Yu, X. W., Liu, X. L., Xie, Y. B., Liu, Z. H. and Yuan, W, R. took part in
the field investigations, including soil and water sample collection and
analysis. Hu, S., Hu, S. Q., Yu, X. W., Liu, X. L. and Xie, Y. B. wrote the
manuscript.
Acknowledgements
We
sincerely thank Liu, C., Song, X. F. and Wang, Z. B. of the Institute of
Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences
(IGSNRR-CAS), for their guidance and assistance in the completion of the data and
thesis in this case! We also thank Zhang, S. D. of the Geographical Indication
Research Center of the IGSNRR-CAS, for her helping in the data collection.
Conflicts
of Interest
The authors
declare no conflicts of interest.
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