Title of article :
Coupled ecological–social dynamics in a forested landscape: Spatial interactions and information flow
Author/Authors :
Satake، نويسنده , , Akiko and Leslie، نويسنده , , Heather M. and Iwasa، نويسنده , , Yoh and Levin، نويسنده , , Simon A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
We develop an agent-based model for forest harvesting to study how interactions between neighboring land parcels and the degree of information flow among landowners influence harvesting patterns. We assume a forest is composed of a number of land parcels that are individually managed. Each parcel is either mature forested, just-harvested, or immature forested. The state transition of each parcel is described by a Markov chain that incorporates the successional dynamics of the forest ecosystem and landowners’ decisions about harvesting. Landowners decide to cut trees based on the expected discounted utility of forested vs. harvested land. One landownerʹs decision to cut trees is assumed to cause the degradation of ecosystem services on the downstream forested parcels. We investigated two different scenarios: in a strongly-connected society, landowners are familiar with each other and have full information regarding the behavior of other landowners. In a weakly-connected society, landowners do not communicate and therefore need to make subjective predictions about the behavior of others without adequate information. Regardless of the type of society, we observed that the spatial interaction between management units caused a chain reaction of tree harvesting in the neighborhood even when healthy forested land provided greater utility than harvested land. The harvest rate was higher in a weakly-connected society than that in a strongly-connected society. If landowners employed a long-term perspective, the harvest rate declined, and a more robust forested landscape emerged. Our results highlight the importance of institutional arrangements that encourage a long-term perspective and increased information flow among landowners in order to achieve successful forest management.
Keywords :
Land use , externality , Tree harvesting , Agent-based models , Expected utility
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology