Impacts of land-use management on ecosystem services and biodiversity: an agent-based modelling approach
Authored by Scott Heckbert, Thomas J Habib, Jeffrey J Wilson, Andrew J K Vandenbroeck, Jerome Cranston, Daniel R Farr
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2814
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
ArcGIS
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://peerj.com/articles/2814/#supp-2
Abstract
The science of ecosystem service (ES) mapping has become increasingly
sophisticated over the past 20 years, and examples of successfully
integrating ES into management decisions at national and sub-national
scales have begun to emerge. However, increasing model sophistication
and accuracyand therefore complexity-may trade-off with ease of use and
applicability to real-world decision-making contexts, so it is vital to
incorporate the lessons learned from implementation efforts into new
model development. Using successful implementation efforts for guidance, we developed an integrated ES modelling system to quantify several
ecosystem services: forest timber production and carbon storage, water
purification, pollination, and biodiversity. The system is designed to
facilitate uptake of ES information into land-use decisions through
three principal considerations: (1) using relatively straightforward
models that can be readily deployed and interpreted without specialized
expertise; (2) using an agent-based modelling framework to enable the
incorporation of human decision-making directly within the model; and
(3) integration among all ES models to simultaneously demonstrate the
effects of a single land-use decision on multiple ES. We present an
implementation of the model for a major watershed in Alberta, Canada, and highlight the system's capabilities to assess a suite of ES under
future management decisions, including forestry activities under two
alternative timber harvest strategies, and through a scenario modelling
analysis exploring different intensities of hypothetical agricultural
expansion. By using a modular approach, the modelling system can be
readily expanded to evaluate additional ecosystem services or management
questions of interest in order to guide land-use decisions to achieve
socioeconomic and environmental objectives.
Tags
Dynamics
Conservation
tradeoffs
systems
carbon
Decisions
Water-quality
Western north-america
Wild bee abundance
Forestry