Conceptual modelling of adaptive biomass management facing climate risk in agro-silvopastoral systems
Authored by Myriam Grillot, Jonathan Vayssieres, Francois Guerrin, Philippe Lecomte
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1051/cagri/2018034
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Biomass recycling plays a key role in the functioning of
agro-silvopastoral systems. In West Africa, the variability of rainfall
impacts the management of this biomass to feed men, livestock, soil and
plants. This study describes a conceptual model of action, based on
``if-then-else{''} rules, which represent the management decisions of
the biomass by the farm households. The study underlines the cascading
consequences of rainfall hazard on the farming activity schedule, the
quantities and the nature of the mobilized biomasses. The most directly
impacted activities are planting and harvesting of crops, animal feeding
and, indirectly, soil fertilization and the management of food stocks.
The action model encompasses the management rules and conditions
constituting the practices of the farm households. It is defined for
four types of mixed crop-livestock households defined according to their
dominant activities: crop versus livestock, and food versus income. Food
and livestock households are more sensitive to rainfall variations. They
present a type of management that is more adaptive because they are more
dependent on their own produced biomasses. This action model was
designed for its integration into an agent-based model to simulate the
consequences of climatic hazards on biomass flows resulting from
interactions between diverse households in a typical West African
village.
Tags
Senegal
decision-making processes
West-africa
Burkina-faso
Farms
Agronomic practices
Weather hazards
Biomass management
Action model
Crop management