期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Environmental Science
Coupling environmental, social and economic models to understand land-use change dynamics in the Mekong Delta
Nghi Quang Huynh1  Quang Chi Truong3  Alexis eDrogoul3 
[1] CTU/IRD JEAI DREAM Can Tho University;Can Tho University;IRD/UPMC/Sorbonne Universites;
关键词: Agent-based modeling;    hybrid modeling;    Integrated Model of Land-Use Change;    Models Coupling;    BDI agent-based model;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fenvs.2016.00019
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

The Vietnamese Mekong Delta has undergone in recent years a considerable transformation in agricultural land-use, fueled by a boom of the exportation, an increase of population, a focus on intensive crops, but also environmental factors like sea level rise or the progression of soil salinity. These transformations have been, however, largely misestimated by the ten-year agricultural plans designed at the provincial levels, on the predictions of which, though, most of the large-scale investments (irrigation infrastructures, protection against flooding or salinity intrusion, and so on) are normally planned. This situation raises the question of how to explain the divergence between the predictions used as a basis for these plans and the actual situation. Answering it could, as a matter of fact, offer some insights on the dynamics at play and hopefully allow designing them more accurately.The dynamics of land-use change at a scale of a region results from the interactions between heterogeneous actors and factors at different scales, among them institutional policies, individual farming choices, land-cover and environmental changes, economic conditions, social dynamics, just to name a few. Understanding its evolution, for example, in this case, to better support agricultural planning, therefore requires the use of models that can represent the individual contributions of each actor or factor, and of course their interactions.We address this question through the design of an integrated hybrid model of land-use change in a specific and carefully chosen case study, which relies on the central hypothesis that the main force driving land-use change is actually the individual choices made by farmers at their local level. Farmers are the actors who decide (or not) to switch from one culture to another and the shifts observed at more global levels (village, district, province, region) are considered, in this model, as a consequence of the aggregation of these individual d

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