Sensitivity Analysis of a Land-Use Change Model with and without Agents to Assess Land Abandonment and Long-Term Re-Forestation in a Swiss Mountain Region
Authored by Julia Maria Braendle, Gaby Langendijk, Simon Peter, Sibyl Hanna Brunner, Robert Huber
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3390/land4020475
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Abstract
Land abandonment and the subsequent re-forestation are important drivers
behind the loss of ecosystem services in mountain regions. Agent-based
models can help to identify global change impacts on farmland
abandonment and can test policy and management options to counteract
this development. Realigning the representation of human decision making
with time scales of ecological processes such as reforestation presents
a major challenge in this context. Models either focus on the
agent-specific behavior anchored in the current generation of farmers at
the expense of representing longer scale environmental processes or they
emphasize the simulation of long-term economic and forest developments
where representation of human behavior is simplified in time and space.
In this context, we compare the representation of individual and
aggregated decision-making in the same model structure and by doing so
address some implications of choosing short or long term time horizons
in land-use modeling. Based on survey data, we integrate dynamic agents
into a comparative static economic sector supply model in a Swiss
mountain region. The results from an extensive sensitivity analysis show
that this agent-based land-use change model can reproduce observed data
correctly and that both model versions are sensitive to the same model
parameters. In particular, in both models the specification of
opportunity costs determines the extent of production activities and
land-use changes by restricting the output space. Our results point out
that the agent-based model can capture short and medium term
developments in land abandonment better than the aggregated version
without losing its sensitivity to important socio-economic drivers. For
comparative static approaches, extensive sensitivity analysis with
respect to opportunity costs, i.e., the measure of benefits forgone due
to alternative uses of labor is essential for the assessment of the
impact of climate change on land abandonment and re-forestation in
mountain regions.
Tags
Decision-Making
Ecosystem services
Agricultural policy
global change
Coupled human
Climate-change impacts
Structural-change
Landscape model
Dairy farmers
European alps