4.7 Article

Modelling the spatial distribution of agricultural land use at the regional scale

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AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT
卷 95, 期 2-3, 页码 465-479

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0167-8809(02)00217-7

关键词

land use; spatially-explicit models; agricultural decision making; farm model

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Agriculture is the most important land use in Europe in geographic terms and because of this it plays a central role in the quality of the wider environment. Whilst the spatial patterns of agricultural land use have changed considerably in recent times, further changes are likely as a result of the influences of policy reform, socio-economics and climate change. Understanding, therefore, how agricultural land use might respond to global environmental change drivers is a research question of considerable importance. The first step, however, in projecting potential future changes in agricultural land use is to be able to understand and represent in models both the socio-economic and physical processes that control current land use distributions. Thus, this paper presents an approach to modelling the spatial distribution of agricultural land use at the regional scale. The approach is based on the simulation of farm-scale decision making processes (based on optimisation) and the response of crops to their physical environment. Regional scale applications of the model are undertaken through the use of spatially-variable, geographic data sets (soils, climate and topography) combined with economic data. Examples of the application of the model are given for two regions of England: the north-west and east Anglia. These regions were selected to give examples of contrasting land use systems within the context of northern European agriculture. The model results are compared statistically with observed distributions of agricultural land use for the same regions in a quasi-validation exercise. The comparison suggests that the model is very good at representing land use that is aggregated at the regional level, and at representing general spatial trends in land use patterns. Some differences were observed, however, in land use densities between the modelled and observed data. The results suggest that the basic hypothesis of the model: that farmers are risk averse, profit maximisers, is a reasonable assumption for the regions studied. However, further study of decision making processes would be likely to improve our ability to model agricultural land use distributions. This includes, for example, the role of farmer attitudes to risk, differing views on future prices and profitability, and the effect of time lags in the decision process. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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