Spatially explicit modelling of agricultural dynamics in semi-arid environments
Authored by Assaf Chen
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2017.08.025
Sponsors:
United States—Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund (BARD)
Platforms:
Repast
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
This paper describes a software package called Spatially Explicit
Agricultural Dynamics (SEAD), which investigates agricultural spatial
and temporal land-use changes. SEAD is an agent-based model whose rules
are set to mimic the human decision making processes regarding
agricultural land expansion. Model calibration is based on remotely
sensed data. Detection of agricultural lands was executed using intraand
inter-annual Landsat images, with an overall accuracy of 86\%. An
analysis regarding the correlation of agricultural spread with water
availability, irrigation infrastructure, road infrastructure, soil type,
and geographical variables was conducted. These data, along with
interviews with agricultural experts examining farmers' decision-making
processes, were translated into rules that were used to model
agricultural expansion. The SEAD results show that agricultural
expansion in the north-western Negev (Israel) is highly dependent on
water availability, which in turn is sensitive to forecasted climate
change scenarios. While the spatial expansion patterns are mostly
influenced by irrigation and road infrastructure positioning and
placement, they vary in their infrastructural costs and agricultural
settlement clustering and connectivity, thus affecting landscape
fragmentation, travel time, and social/ecological connectivity. SEAD,
being highly encapsulated and object-oriented in nature, can be reused
in different settings. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
Agent
diffusion
Decision support system
land-cover change
Accuracy
System
Climate-change
Protocol
Impact
Region
Plants
Agricultural detection and classification
Agricultural expansion
Land-use land-cover changes
Water resource
management