Constructing stability landscapes to identify alternative states in coupled social-ecological agent-based models
Authored by Patrick Bitterman, David A Bennett
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.5751/es-08677-210321
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/4722/
Abstract
The resilience of a social-ecological system is measured by its ability
to retain core functionality when subjected to perturbation. Resilience
is contextually dependent on the state of system components, the complex
interactions among these components, and the timing, location, and
magnitude of perturbations. The stability landscape concept provides a
useful framework for considering resilience within the specified context
of a particular social-ecological system but has proven difficult to
operationalize. This difficulty stems largely from the complex, multidimensional nature of the systems of interest and uncertainty in
system response. Agent-based models are an effective methodology for
understanding how cross-scale processes within and across social and
ecological domains contribute to overall system resilience. We present
the results of a stylized model of agricultural land use in a small
watershed that is typical of the Midwestern United States. The spatially
explicit model couples land use, biophysical models, and economic
drivers with an agent-based model to explore the effects of
perturbations and policy adaptations on system outcomes. By applying the
coupled modeling approach within the resilience and stability landscape
frameworks, we (1) estimate the sensitivity of the system to
context-specific perturbations, (2) determine potential outcomes of
those perturbations, (3) identify possible alternative states within
state space, (4) evaluate the resilience of system states, and (5)
characterize changes in system-scale resilience brought on by changes in
individual land use decisions.
Tags
vulnerability
Land-use
resilience
systems
sustainability science
Climate-change
Stable states
Regime shifts
Adaptive capacity
Crop