Land managers' behaviours modulate pathways to visions of future land systems
Authored by Mark DA Rounsevell, Sascha Holzhauer, Calum Brown, Marc J Metzger, James S Paterson
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10113-016-0999-y
Sponsors:
European Union
Visions of Land Use Transitions in Europe (VOLANTE)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Attempts to influence the development of land systems are often based on
detailed scenarios that constrain relevant factors, describe a range of
divergent but plausible futures and identify potential pathways to
visions of desirable conditions. However, a number of assumptions are
usually made during this process, and one of the most substantial is
that land managers display homogeneous, economically rational behaviour
across space, time and scenarios. This assumption precludes the
consideration of important behavioural effects and limits understanding
of the feasibility of scenario-based pathways towards visions. We use an
agent-based land use model to examine broad forms of behavioural
variation within defined scenarios in theoretical contexts. We relate
model results to stakeholder-developed visions of desired future land
systems in Europe and so assess the scope for behavioural pathways
towards these normative futures. We find that the achievability of
visions is determined by internal inconsistencies, scenario conditions
and the multifunctional potential of land uses, with a fundamental
tension between large-scale land use productivity and small-scale
diversity (i.e. land sparing and land sharing). Trading conditions
affect this balance most strongly and represent an obvious target for
governance strategies concerned with achieving multifunctional land use.
However, within specific circumstances behavioural effects are strong
and diverse, and can accelerate, counteract or mitigate the impacts of
other drivers. This suggests that visions for the land system should
focus on trade-offs, identifying those that are least strong, most
acceptable and most susceptible to adjustment through behavioural or
other influences.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
Agent-based model
Climate change
Biodiversity
Land use
Conservation
Scenario
Scenarios
Climate-change
Drivers
Services
Europe
Multifunctional
Stakeholder engagement
Ensemble