Multi-Agent Modeling and Simulation of Farmland Use Change in a Farming-Pastoral Zone: A Case Study of Qianjingou Town in Inner Mongolia, China
Authored by He Qing Huang, Lihu Pan, Xuehong Bai, Huimin Yan
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3390/su71114802
Sponsors:
Chinese National Natural Science Foundation
Ministry of Science and Technology
STS project of CAS
Platforms:
Repast
Java
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Farmland is the most basic material condition for guaranteeing rural
livelihoods and national food security, and exploring management
strategies that take both stable rural livelihoods and sustainable
farmland use into account has vital significance in theory and practice.
Farmland is a complex and self-adaptive system that couples human and
natural systems, and natural and social factors that are related to its
changing process need to be considered when modeling farmland changing
processes. This paper uses Qianjingou Town in the Inner Mongolian
farming-pastoral zone as a study area. From the perspective of the
relationship between household livelihood and farmland use, this study
establishes the process mechanism of farmland use change based on
questionnaire data, and constructs a multi-agent simulation model of
farmland use change using the Eclipse and Repast toolbox. Through
simulating the relationship between natural factors (including
geographical location) and household behavior, this paper systematically
simulates household farmland abandonment and rent behaviors, and
accurately describes the dynamic interactions between household
livelihoods and the factors related to farmland use change. These
factors include natural factors (net primary productivity, road
accessibility, slope and relief amplitude) and social factors (household
family structures, economic development and government policies).
Ultimately, this study scientifically predicts the future farmland use
change trend in the next 30 years. The simulation results show that the
number of abandoned and sublet farmland plots has a gradually increasing
trend, and the number of non-farming households and pure-outworking
households has a remarkable increasing trend, whereas the number of
part-farming households and pure-farming households has a decreasing
trend. Household livelihood sustainability in the study area is
confronted with increasing pressure, and household non-farm employment
has an increasing trend, while regional appropriate-scale agricultural
management is maintained. The research results establish the theoretical
foundation and a basic method for developing sustainable farmland use
management that can meet the willingness of households and guarantee
grain and ecological security.
Tags
Agriculture
Agent-based models
Management
Landscape
land-cover change
Human decisions
Coupled human
Livelihood strategies
Natural
systems
Trajectories