Land-use change in oil palm dominated tropical landscapes-An agent-based model to explore ecological and socio-economic trade-offs
Authored by Katrin M Meyer, Kerstin Wiegand, Johannes Heinonen, Claudia Dislich, Elisabeth Hettig, Jan Salecker, Jann Lay, Suria Tarigan
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190506
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190506.s004
Abstract
Land-use changes have dramatically transformed tropical landscapes. We
describe an ecological- economic land-use change model as an integrated,
exploratory tool used to analyze how tropical land-use change affects
ecological and socio-economic functions. The model analysis seeks to
determine what kind of landscape mosaic can improve the ensemble of
ecosystem functioning, biodiversity, and economic benefit based on the
synergies and trade-offs that we have to account for. More specifically,
(1) how do specific ecosystem functions, such as carbon storage, and
economic functions, such as household consumption, relate to each other?
(2) How do external factors, such as the output prices of crops, affect
these relationships? (3) How do these relationships change when
production inefficiency differs between smallholder farmers and learning
is incorporated? We initialize the ecological-economic model with
artificially generated land-use maps parameterized to our study region.
The economic sub-model simulates smallholder land-use management
decisions based on a profit maximization assumption. Each household
determines factor inputs for all household fields and decides on
land-use change based on available wealth. The ecological sub-model
includes a simple account of carbon sequestration in above-ground and
below-ground vegetation. We demonstrate model capabilities with results
on household consumption and carbon sequestration from different output
price and farming efficiency scenarios. The overall results reveal
complex interactions between the economic and ecological spheres. For
instance, model scenarios with heterogeneous crop-specific household
productivity reveal a comparatively high inertia of land-use change. Our
model analysis even shows such an increased temporal stability in
landscape composition and carbon stocks of the agricultural area under
dynamic price trends. These findings underline the utility of
ecological- economic models, such as ours, to act as exploratory tools
which can advance our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the
trade-offs and synergies of ecological and economic functions in
tropical landscapes.
Tags
Indonesia
Management
Biodiversity
Livelihoods
Ecosystem
Protocol
Expansion
Use dynamics
Sumatra
Agroforests