Browsing by Author "Castro, Luz Maria"
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- Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsAccounting for multiple ecosystem services in a simulation of land‐use decisions: Does it reduce tropical deforestation?(2020)
;Knoke, Thomas; ;Rammig, Anja ;Gosling, Elizabeth ;Hildebrandt, Patrick ;Härtl, Fabian ;Peters, Thorsten ;Richter, Michael ;Diertl, Karl‐Heinz ;Castro, Luz Maria ;Calvas, Baltazar ;Ochoa, Santiago ;Valle‐Carrión, Liz Anabelle ;Hamer, Ute ;Tischer, Alexander ;Potthast, Karin ;Windhorst, David; ;Wilcke, Wolfgang ;Velescu, Andre ;Gerique, Andres ;Pohle, Perdita ;Adams, Julia ;Breuer, Lutz ;Mosandl, Reinhard ;Beck, Erwin ;Weber, Michael ;Stimm, Bernd ;Silva, Brenner ;Verburg, Peter H.Bendix, JörgConversion of tropical forests is among the primary causes of global environmental change. The loss of their important environmental services has prompted calls to integrate ecosystem services (ES) in addition to socio-economic objectives in decision-making. To test the effect of accounting for both ES and socio-economic objectives in land-use decisions, we develop a new dynamic approach to model deforestation scenarios for tropical mountain forests. We integrate multi-objective optimization of land allocation with an innovative approach to consider uncertainty spaces for each objective. These uncertainty spaces account for potential variability among decision-makers, who may have different expectations about the future. When optimizing only socio-economic objectives, the model continues the past trend in deforestation (1975–2015) in the projected land-use allocation (2015–2070). Based on indicators for biomass production, carbon storage, climate and water regulation, and soil quality, we show that considering multiple ES in addition to the socio-economic objectives has heterogeneous effects on land-use allocation. It saves some natural forest if the natural forest share is below 38%, and can stop deforestation once the natural forest share drops below 10%. For landscapes with high shares of forest (38%–80% in our study), accounting for multiple ES under high uncertainty of their indicators may, however, accelerate deforestation. For such multifunctional landscapes, two main effects prevail: (a) accelerated expansion of diversified non-natural areas to elevate the levels of the indicators and (b) increased landscape diversification to maintain multiple ES, reducing the proportion of natural forest. Only when accounting for vascular plant species richness as an explicit objective in the optimization, deforestation was consistently reduced. Aiming for multifunctional landscapes may therefore conflict with the aim of reducing deforestation, which we can quantify here for the first time. Our findings are relevant for identifying types of landscapes where this conflict may arise and to better align respective policies. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsBalancing regulating and provisioning ecosystem services: Comprehensive land-use concepts for effective conservation(2017)
; ;Ochoa Moreno, Santiago ;Castro, Luz Maria ;Calvas, Baltazar ;Knoke, Thomas0000-0002-6257-2026 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsCompositional diversity of rehabilitated tropical lands supports multiple ecosystem services and buffers uncertainties(2016)
;Knoke, Thomas; ;Hildebrandt, Patrick ;Calvas, Baltazar ;Castro, Luz Maria ;Härtl, Fabian ;Döllerer, Martin ;Hamer, Ute ;Windhorst, David ;Wiersma, Yolanda F. ;Curatola Fernández, Giulia F. ;Obermeier, Wolfgang A. ;Adams, Julia ;Breuer, Lutz ;Mosandl, Reinhard ;Beck, Erwin ;Weber, Michael ;Stimm, Bernd ;Haber, Wolfgang ;Fürst, ChristineBendix, JörgHigh landscape diversity is assumed to increase the number and level of ecosystem services. However, the interactions between ecosystem service provision, disturbance and landscape composition are poorly understood. Here we present a novel approach to include uncertainty in the optimization of land allocation for improving the provision of multiple ecosystem services. We refer to the rehabilitation of abandoned agricultural lands in Ecuador including two types of both afforestation and pasture rehabilitation, together with a succession option. Our results show that high compositional landscape diversity supports multiple ecosystem services (multifunction effect). This implicitly provides a buffer against uncertainty. Our work shows that active integration of uncertainty is only important when optimizing single or highly correlated ecosystem services and that the multifunction effect on landscape diversity is stronger than the uncertainty effect. This is an important insight to support a land-use planning based on ecosystem services. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsConfronting sustainable intensification with uncertainty and extreme values on smallholder tropical farms(2022)
;Knoke, Thomas ;Gosling, Elizabeth ;Reith, Esther ;Gerique, Andres ;Pohle, Perdita ;Valle Carrión, Liz ;Ochoa Moreno, Wilman Santiago ;Castro, Luz Maria ;Calvas, Baltazar ;Hildebrandt, Patrick; ;Döllerer, M.Bastit, F.Abstract Sustainable intensification of agricultural lands might reconcile the conservation of tropical forest with food production, but in-depth assessments considering uncertainty and extreme values are missing. Uncertainty prohibits mapping probabilities to potential future states or ranking these states in terms of their likelihood. This in turn hampers the assessment of possible decision outcomes. Here, we use simulations to investigate how uncertainty may influence the social acceptability of alternative land-use strategies to halt tropical deforestation (including sustainable intensification), based on indicators representing farmer satisfaction. The results show how extreme values (worst values) for indicators of farmer satisfaction may undermine the adoption of sustainable intensification. We demonstrate that a pure forest conservation strategy leads to lower food production, but outperforms a sustainable intensification strategy that maintains food security. Pure forest conservation performed better, i.e., could secure higher farmer satisfaction, than sustainable intensification across a range of indicator groups. This suggests strong barriers to achieving sustainable intensification. Using agricultural subsidies breaks the dominance of pure forest conservation by enhancing the economic returns of sustainable intensification. We discuss the importance of access to labor and farmers’ preferences for the use of already cleared lands, which achieved the worst values under sustainable intensification and conclude that any assessment of land-use strategies requires careful consideration of uncertainty and extreme values. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsOptimizing agricultural land-use portfolios with scarce data-A non-stochastic model(2015)
;Knoke, Thomas; ;Härtl, Fabian ;Castro, Luz Maria ;Calvas, Baltazar ;Hildebrandt, Patrick0000-0002-6257-2026The theory of portfolio selection has often been applied to help improve economic decisions about the environment. Applying this theory requires information on the covariance of uncertain returns between all combinations of the economic options and also assumes that returns are normally distributed. As it is usually difficult to fulfill all data requirements and assumptions, this paper proposes a variant of robust portfolio optimization as an alternative that needs less pre-information. The approach considers future uncertainties in a non-stochastic fashion through possible deviations from the nominal return of land-use alternatives. Maximizing the economic return of the land-use portfolio is conditional on meeting an inclusive set of constraints. These demand that a pre-defined return threshold is achieved by the robust solution for each uncertainty scenario considered. Based on data for eight agricultural crops common in the Ecuadorian lowlands, a comparison with portfolios generated by classical stochastic mean-variance optimization shows greater land-use diversification (through increased Shannon indices), but only moderate expected economic loss of non-stochastic robust land-use portfolios. We conclude that non-stochastic derivation of land-use portfolios is a good alternative to the classical stochastic model, in situations where information on economic input parameters is scarce.