The importance of socio-ecological system dynamics in understanding adaptation to global change in the forestry sector
Authored by Mark DA Rounsevell, Sascha Holzhauer, Calum Brown, Victor Blanco, Gregor Vulturius
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.02.066
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
CRAFTY
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Adaptation is necessary to cope with or take advantage of the effects of
climate change on socio-ecological systems. This is especially important
in the forestry sector, which is sensitive to the ecological and
economic impacts of climate change, and where the adaptive decisions of
owners play out over long periods of time. Relatively little is known
about how successful these decisions are likely to be in meeting demands
for ecosystem services in an uncertain future.
We explore adaptation to global change in the forestry sector using
CRAFTY-Sweden; an agent-based model that represents large-scale land-use
dynamics, based on the demand and supply of ecosystem services. Future
impacts and adaptation within the Swedish forestry sector were simulated
for scenarios of socio-economic change (Shared Socio-economic Pathways)
and climatic change (Representative Concentration Pathways, for three
climate models), between 2010 and 2100.
Substantial differences were found in the competitiveness and coping
ability of land owners implementing different management strategies
through time. Generally, multi-objective management was found to provide
the best basis for adaptation. Across large regions, however, a
combination of management strategies was better at meeting ecosystem
service demands. Results also show that adaptive capacity evolves
through time in response to external (global) drivers and interactions
between individual actors. This suggests that process-based models are
more appropriate for the study of autonomous adaptation and future
adaptive and coping capacities than models based on indicators, discrete
time snapshots or exogenous proxies. Nevertheless, a combination of
planned and autonomous adaptation by institutions and forest owners is
likely to be more successful than either group acting alone. (C) 2017
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Agent-based model
Climate change
Management
Land-use change
Decision-Making
Scenario
Impact assessment
Sweden
Owners
Adaptive capacity
Boreal forest
Change
vulnerability
Ecosystem
services
Land owner decision-making
Climate-change adaptation