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Land change science

Land change science refers to the interdisciplinary study of changes in climate, land use, and land cover.[1] Land change science specifically seeks to evaluate patterns, processes, and consequences in changes in land use and cover over time. The purpose of land change science is to contribute to existing knowledge of climate change and to the development of sustainable resource management and land use policy. The field is informed by a number of related disciplines, such as remote sensing, landscape ecology, and political ecology, and uses a broad range of methods to evaluate the patterns and processes that underlie land cover change. Land change science addresses land use as a coupled human-environment system to understand the impacts of interconnected environmental and social issues, including deforestation and urbanization.

Imaging by NASA of the effects of deforestation on rainfall in Brazil, an example of land change science modeling

History Edit

Origin Edit

Human changes to land surfaces have been documented for centuries as having significant impacts on both earth systems and human well-being. The reshaping of landscapes to serve human needs, such as the deforestation for farmland, can have long-term effects on earth systems and exacerbate the causes of climate change.[2] Although the burning of fossil fuels is the primary driver of present-day climate change, prior to the Industrial Revolution, deforestation and irrigation were the largest sources of human-driven greenhouse gas emissions.[2] Even today, 35% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide contributions can be attributed to land use or land cover changes.[2] Currently, almost 50% of Earth’s non-ice land surface has been transformed by human activities, with approximately 40% of that land used for agriculture, surpassing natural systems as the principal source of nitrogen emissions.[2]

 
Land cover and land use changes, such as land conversion to cropland (yellow regions on map), have significant global-scale impacts.

Land change science is a recently developed field, which emerged in conjunction with the advancement of climate change and global environmental change research, and is important to the evolution of climate change science and adaptation. It is both problem-oriented and interdisciplinary.[3] In the mid-20th century, human-environment relationships were emerging in areas of study such as anthropology and geography.[4] Some scholars assert that the discipline of land change science is loosely derived from German concepts of landscape as the total amount of things within a given territory.[4] In the latter half of the 20th century, scientists studying cultural ecology and risk-assessment ecology worked to develop land change science as a means of addressing land as a human-environment system that can be understood as a foundation of global environmental science.[4]

Thus far, the purpose of land change science has been to:[2]

  1. Observe and monitor land changes underway throughout the world
  2. Understand land change as a human-environmental system
  3. Model land change
  4. Assess system outcomes such as vulnerability, sustainability, and resilience

Influences Edit

Land change science is an interdisciplinary field, and thus is influenced by a number of related areas of study, including remote sensing, political ecology, resource economics, landscape ecology, and biogeography.[2] It is meant to supplement the study of climate change, and through the examination of land cover and land use changes in conjunction with climatic changes over the same period of time, scientists can better understand how human land use practices contribute to a changing climate.[4] Given its close association with the study of climate change, land change science is inherently sustainability research and the scientific knowledge it produces is used to influence the development of sustainable agriculture, and sustainable land use practices and policies.[3]

Dimensions Edit

Land change science mainly operates within the international scientific research frameworks from which its fundamental questions were developed.[4] Although the field has ties to social and cultural studies in its understanding of land and land change as a human-environment system, land change science also focuses on ecosystems and earth systems' structure, function, and effects on land change, independent of human activity. Land change science encompasses a broad scope of dimensions, ranging from quantifying the ecological effects of land cover change, to understanding the socio-environmental drivers for land-use decisions at an institutional level.[5] As a result, land change science relies heavily on the synthesis of a wide range of data and a diverse range of data collection methods, some of which are detailed below.[5]

Land cover monitoring and assessments Edit

A primary function of land change science is to document and model long-term patterns of landscape change, which may result from both human activity and natural processes.[6] In the course of monitoring and assessing land cover and land use changes, scientists look at several factors, including where land-cover and land-use are changing, the extent and timescale of changes, and how changes vary through time.[7] To this end, scientists use a variety of tools, including satellite imagery and other sources of remotely sensed data (e.g., aircraft imagery), field observations, historical accounts, and reconstruction modeling.[6] These tools, particularly satellite imagery, allow land change scientists to accurately monitor land-change rates and create a consistent, long-term record to quantify change variability over time.[7] Through observing patterns in land cover changes, scientists can determine the consequences of these changes, predict the impact of future changes, and use this information to inform strategic land management.

Aral Sea Edit

 
Remote sensing images show changes to the extent of the Aral Sea from 1989 (left) to 2014 (right).

The rapid decline of the Aral Sea is an example how local-scale land use and land change can have compounded impacts on regional climate systems, particularly when human activities heavily disrupt natural climatic cycles, how land change science can be used to map and study such changes.[2] In 1960, the Aral Sea, located in Central Asia, was the world's fourth largest lake.[8] However, a water diversion project, undertaken by the Soviet Union to irrigate arid plains in what is now Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan, resulted in the Aral Sea losing 85% of its land cover and 90% of its volume.[8] The loss of the Aral Sea has had a significant effect on human-environment interactions in the region, including the decimation of the sea's fishing industry and the salinization of agricultural lands by the wind-spread of dried sea salt beds.[2][8] Additionally, scientists have been able to use technology such as NASA's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) to track changes to the Aral Sea and its surrounding climate over time.[9] This use of modeling and satellite imagery to track human-caused land cover change is characteristic of the scope of land change science.

Risk and vulnerability Edit

Modeling risk and vulnerability is also one of land change science's practical applications. Accurate predictions of how human activity will influence land cover change over time, as well as the impact that such changes have on the sustainability of ecological and human systems, can inform the creation of policy designed to address these changes.[10]

Studying risk and vulnerability in the context of land change science entails the development of quantitative, qualitative, and geospatial models, methods, and support tools.[11] The purpose of these tools is to communicate the vulnerability of both human communities and natural ecosystems to hazard events or long-term land change. Modeling risk and vulnerability requires analyses of community sensitivity to hazards, an understanding of geographic distributions of people and infrastructure, and accurate calculation of the probability of specific disturbances occurring.[11]

Land change modeling Edit

A key method for studying risk and vulnerability in the context of land change science is land change modeling (LCM), which can be used to simulate changes and land use and land cover.[12] LCMs can be used to predict how land use and land cover may change under alternate circumstances, which is useful for risk assessment, in that it allows for the prediction of potential impacts and can be used to inform policy decisions, albeit with some uncertainty.[12]

Human impact and land change science Edit

Although land change science involves quantifying the location, extent, and variability of land change cover and the analysis of emergent patterns, it remains fundamentally interdisciplinary, including social and economic components.[7] Human activity is not only the most significant cause of land cover change, but humans are also directly impacted by the environmental consequences of these changes.[7] Collective land use and land cover changes have fundamentally altered the functioning of key Earth systems.[13] For instance, human changes to land use and land cover have a profound impact climate at a local and regional level, which in turn contributes to global warming.[13] More generally, maximizing natural resources and ecosystem services for short-term benefits often hinders the long-term resilience of ecosystems and in turn, their ability to support human needs.[13]

Given the important role that humans play in land cover change, and to understand land change patterns and their affect the climate, land change scientists must identify the social and economic drivers of historic land change. Below are some examples of land use and land cover change that play a key role in the social and economic dimensions of land change science.

Tropical deforestation Edit

 
Rainforest deforestation for land use conversion

Deforestation, in the context of land change science, is the systematic and permanent conversion of previously forested land for other uses.[14] It has historically been a primary facilitator of land use and land cover change, is a particular focus of land change science.[10] Forests are a vital part of the global ecosystem and are essential to carbon capture, ecological processes, and biodiversity.[10] However, since the invention of agriculture, global forest cover has diminished by 35%.[10] Further, tropical forests in particular support at least two-thirds of the world's biodiversity, and sustained changes in land cover in these regions are believed to be contributing to a mass extinction.[15] Given the severe ecological consequences resulting from human-driven forest land use conversion, as well as the continuing downward trend in forest cover, to effectively model and evaluate patterns of land use change, scientists must also study the social and economic drivers of deforestation itself.

Land use and land cover change resulting from deforestation is primarily the effect of large-scale socio-economic processes. Importantly, there is rarely one direct or underlying cause for deforestation.[16] Rather, deforestation is the result of intertwining systemic forces working simultaneously or sequentially to change land cover.[16] For instance, mass deforestation is often viewed as the product of industrial agriculture, yet a considerable portion old-growth forest deforestation is the result of small-scale migrant farming.[17] As forest cover is removed, forest resources become exhausted and increasing populations lead to scarcity, which prompts people to move again to previously undisturbed forest, restarting the process of deforestation.[17] This process is referred to as rural-to-rural migration.[17] There are several reasons behind this continued migration: poverty-driven lack of available farmland and high costs may lead to an increase in farming intensity on existing farmland.[17] This leads to the overexploitation of farmland, and down the line results in desertification, another land cover change, which renders soil unusable and unprofitable, requiring farmers to seek out untouched and unpopulated old-growth forests.[17]

In addition to rural migration and subsistence farming, economic development can also play a substantial role in deforestation.[16] For example, road and railway expansions designed to increase quality of life have resulted in significant deforestation in the Amazon and Central America.[16] Moreover, the underlying drivers of economic development are often linked to global economic engagement, instead of to poverty, ranging from increased exports to a foreign debt.[16] Deforestation occurs for many interconnected reasons, and thus it is important for land change scientists to track it in order to identify patterns that can shed light on why and when it happens. Phenomena such as economic insecurity and rural migration are not necessarily quantitative, but they nevertheless provide valuable information to land change science models that attempt to predict future land cover change and its consequences.

Urbanization Edit

 
An aerial image of New Delhi, India, one of the world's largest urban areas

Broadly, urbanization is the increasing number of people who live in urban areas. In the context of land change science, urbanization refers to both urban population growth and the physical growth of urban areas.[18] According to the United Nations, the global urban population has increased rapidly since 1950, from 751 million to 4.2 billion in 2018, and current trends predict this number will continue to grow.[19] Accompanying this population shift are significant changes in economic flow, culture and lifestyle, and spatial population distribution.[19] Although urbanized areas cover just 3% of the Earth's surface, they nevertheless have a significant impact on land use and land cover change.[20]

Urbanization is important to land use and land cover change, and therefore land change science, for a variety of reasons. In particular, urbanization affects land change elsewhere through the shifting of urban-rural linkages, or the ecological footprint of the transfer of goods and services between urban and rural areas.[13] Increases in urbanization lead to increases in consumption, which puts increased pressure on surrounding rural lands.[13] The outward spread of urban areas can also take over adjacent land formerly used for crop cultivation.[13]

Urban heat islands Edit

Urbanization additionally affects land cover through the urban heat island effect. Heat islands occur when, due to high concentrations of structures, such as buildings and roads, that absorb and re-emit solar radiation, and low concentrations of vegetative cover, urban areas experience higher temperatures than surrounding areas.[21] Heat islands can cause increased energy consumption, which results in higher rates of emission for greenhouse gases.[21] The high temperatures associated with heat islands can also compromise human health, particularly in low-income areas.[21] The effects of urban areas on climate indicate that urbanization may become a significant component of land change science.

Obstacles Edit

Land change science as a discipline faces several challenges, many of the stemming from its interdisciplinary qualities or issues with developing inferences using aggregate data.[22] For example, land change science is limited by constraints on data and lack of understanding of underlying issues of land change.[23] Specifically, the spatial models frequently used to study land change may restricted by lack of access to public data on land change, faulty sensors, and high levels of variable uncertainty.[23] Thus, models are often only able to make short-term projections, which severely limits the level of prediction they can provide.[23] Additionally, it is difficult to synthesize and combine the case studies of social-environmental systems that are essential to the study of land change on a global scale.[24] Thus, these setbacks pose fundamental challenges to the connection of communities and environment that land change science seeks to achieve.[22]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Land Change Science Program - Science". www.usgs.gov. from the original on 2021-02-10. Retrieved 2021-02-09.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Turner, B. L.; Lambin, Eric F.; Reenberg, Anette (2007-12-26). "The emergence of land change science for global environmental change and sustainability". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (52): 20666–20671. doi:10.1073/pnas.0704119104. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2409212. PMID 18093934.
  3. ^ a b Messerli, Peter; Heinimann, Andreas; Giger, Markus; Breu, Thomas; Schönweger, Oliver (2013-10-01). "From 'land grabbing' to sustainable investments in land: potential contributions by land change science". Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability. 5 (5): 528–534. doi:10.1016/j.cosust.2013.03.004. ISSN 1877-3435.
  4. ^ a b c d e Turner, B.L.; Robbins, Paul (November 2008). "Land-Change Science and Political Ecology: Similarities, Differences, and Implications for Sustainability Science". Annual Review of Environment and Resources. 33 (1): 295–316. doi:10.1146/annurev.environ.33.022207.104943. ISSN 1543-5938.
  5. ^ a b Magliocca, Nicholas R.; Rudel, Thomas K.; Verburg, Peter H.; McConnell, William J.; Mertz, Ole; Gerstner, Katharina; Heinimann, Andreas; Ellis, Erle C. (February 2015). "Synthesis in land change science: methodological patterns, challenges, and guidelines". Regional Environmental Change. 15 (2): 211–226. doi:10.1007/s10113-014-0626-8. ISSN 1436-3798. PMC 4372122. PMID 25821402.
  6. ^ a b "Land Cover Monitoring and Assessments | USGS.gov". www.usgs.gov. from the original on 2021-02-10. Retrieved 2021-02-09.
  7. ^ a b c d "The Science of LCLUC | LCLUC". lcluc.umd.edu. from the original on 2021-01-17. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
  8. ^ a b c Middleton, Nick (2019). The Global Casino: An Introduction to Environmental Issues. London & New York: Routledge. pp. 179–182. ISBN 978-1-315-15840-2.
  9. ^ "World of Change: Shrinking Aral Sea". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 2014-09-24. from the original on 2021-03-20. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
  10. ^ a b c d Mayer, Audrey L.; Buma, Brian; Davis, Amélie; Gagné, Sara A.; Loudermilk, E. Louise; Scheller, Robert M.; Schmiegelow, Fiona K.A.; Wiersma, Yolanda F.; Franklin, Janet (2016-04-27). "How Landscape Ecology Informs Global Land-Change Science and Policy". BioScience. 66 (6): 458–469. doi:10.1093/biosci/biw035. ISSN 0006-3568.
  11. ^ a b "Risk and Vulnerability | USGS.gov". www.usgs.gov. from the original on 2021-01-25. Retrieved 2021-02-09.
  12. ^ a b Van Vliet, Jasper; Bregt, Arnold K.; Brown, Daniel G.; Van Delden, Hedwig; Heckbert, Scott; Verburg, Peter H. (2016-08-01). "A review of current calibration and validation practices in land-change modeling". Environmental Modelling & Software. 82: 174–182. doi:10.1016/j.envsoft.2016.04.017. ISSN 1364-8152. from the original on 2021-04-18. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Lambin, Eric F.; Turner, B.L.; Geist, Helmut J.; Agbola, Samuel B.; Angelsen, Arild; Bruce, John W.; Coomes, Oliver T.; Dirzo, Rodolfo; Fischer, Günther; Folke, Carl; George, P.S.; Homewood, Katherine; Imbernon, Jacques; Leemans, Rik; Li, Xiubin; Moran, Emilio F.; Mortimore, Michael; Ramakrishnan, P.S.; Richards, John F.; Skånes, Helle; Steffen, Will; Stone, Glenn D.; Svedin, Uno; Veldkamp, Tom A.; Vogel, Coleen; Xu, Jianchu (2001-12-01). "The causes of land-use and land-cover change: moving beyond the myths". Global Environmental Change. 11 (4): 261–269. doi:10.1016/S0959-3780(01)00007-3. ISSN 0959-3780. from the original on 2020-07-05. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
  14. ^ November 2019, Sarah Derouin-Live Science Contributor 06. "Deforestation: Facts, Causes & Effects". livescience.com. from the original on 2020-12-20. Retrieved 2021-03-08. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  15. ^ Giam, Xingli (2017-06-06). "Global biodiversity loss from tropical deforestation". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 114 (23): 5775–5777. Bibcode:2017PNAS..114.5775G. doi:10.1073/pnas.1706264114. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 5468656. PMID 28550105.
  16. ^ a b c d e "Tropical Deforestation". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 2007-03-30. from the original on 2021-03-31. Retrieved 2021-04-08.
  17. ^ a b c d e López-Carr, David; Burgdorfer, Jason (2013-01-01). "Deforestation Drivers: Population, Migration, and Tropical Land Use". Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development. 55 (1): 3–11. doi:10.1080/00139157.2013.748385. ISSN 0013-9157. PMC 3857132. PMID 24347675.
  18. ^ "Urbanization". ScienceDaily. from the original on 2021-01-13. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
  19. ^ a b United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division (2019). World Urbanization Prospects 2018: Highlights (ST/ESA/SER.A/421).
  20. ^ Liu, Zhifeng; He, Chunyang; Zhou, Yuyu; Wu, Jianguo (May 2014). "How much of the world's land has been urbanized, really? A hierarchical framework for avoiding confusion". Landscape Ecology. 29 (5): 763–771. doi:10.1007/s10980-014-0034-y. ISSN 0921-2973. S2CID 207209868.
  21. ^ a b c US EPA, OAR (2014-02-28). "Heat Island Effect". US EPA. from the original on 2021-04-07. Retrieved 2021-04-09.
  22. ^ a b Rindfuss, Ronald R.; Walsh, Stephen J.; Turner, B. L.; Fox, Jefferson; Mishra, Vinod (2004-09-28). "Developing a science of land change: Challenges and methodological issues". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 101 (39): 13976–13981. Bibcode:2004PNAS..10113976R. doi:10.1073/pnas.0401545101. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 521107. PMID 15383671.
  23. ^ a b c Council, National Research (2013-09-16). Advancing Land Change Modeling: Opportunities and Research Requirements. doi:10.17226/18385. ISBN 978-0-309-28833-0. from the original on 2021-04-16. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
  24. ^ "GLOBE: Global Collaboration Engine - Land Change Science". from the original on 2021-04-16. Retrieved 2021-04-16.

land, change, science, refers, interdisciplinary, study, changes, climate, land, land, cover, specifically, seeks, evaluate, patterns, processes, consequences, changes, land, cover, over, time, purpose, land, change, science, contribute, existing, knowledge, c. Land change science refers to the interdisciplinary study of changes in climate land use and land cover 1 Land change science specifically seeks to evaluate patterns processes and consequences in changes in land use and cover over time The purpose of land change science is to contribute to existing knowledge of climate change and to the development of sustainable resource management and land use policy The field is informed by a number of related disciplines such as remote sensing landscape ecology and political ecology and uses a broad range of methods to evaluate the patterns and processes that underlie land cover change Land change science addresses land use as a coupled human environment system to understand the impacts of interconnected environmental and social issues including deforestation and urbanization Imaging by NASA of the effects of deforestation on rainfall in Brazil an example of land change science modeling Contents 1 History 1 1 Origin 1 2 Influences 2 Dimensions 2 1 Land cover monitoring and assessments 2 1 1 Aral Sea 2 2 Risk and vulnerability 2 2 1 Land change modeling 3 Human impact and land change science 3 1 Tropical deforestation 3 2 Urbanization 3 2 1 Urban heat islands 4 Obstacles 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory EditOrigin EditHuman changes to land surfaces have been documented for centuries as having significant impacts on both earth systems and human well being The reshaping of landscapes to serve human needs such as the deforestation for farmland can have long term effects on earth systems and exacerbate the causes of climate change 2 Although the burning of fossil fuels is the primary driver of present day climate change prior to the Industrial Revolution deforestation and irrigation were the largest sources of human driven greenhouse gas emissions 2 Even today 35 of anthropogenic carbon dioxide contributions can be attributed to land use or land cover changes 2 Currently almost 50 of Earth s non ice land surface has been transformed by human activities with approximately 40 of that land used for agriculture surpassing natural systems as the principal source of nitrogen emissions 2 nbsp Land cover and land use changes such as land conversion to cropland yellow regions on map have significant global scale impacts Land change science is a recently developed field which emerged in conjunction with the advancement of climate change and global environmental change research and is important to the evolution of climate change science and adaptation It is both problem oriented and interdisciplinary 3 In the mid 20th century human environment relationships were emerging in areas of study such as anthropology and geography 4 Some scholars assert that the discipline of land change science is loosely derived from German concepts of landscape as the total amount of things within a given territory 4 In the latter half of the 20th century scientists studying cultural ecology and risk assessment ecology worked to develop land change science as a means of addressing land as a human environment system that can be understood as a foundation of global environmental science 4 Thus far the purpose of land change science has been to 2 Observe and monitor land changes underway throughout the world Understand land change as a human environmental system Model land change Assess system outcomes such as vulnerability sustainability and resilienceInfluences Edit Land change science is an interdisciplinary field and thus is influenced by a number of related areas of study including remote sensing political ecology resource economics landscape ecology and biogeography 2 It is meant to supplement the study of climate change and through the examination of land cover and land use changes in conjunction with climatic changes over the same period of time scientists can better understand how human land use practices contribute to a changing climate 4 Given its close association with the study of climate change land change science is inherently sustainability research and the scientific knowledge it produces is used to influence the development of sustainable agriculture and sustainable land use practices and policies 3 Dimensions EditLand change science mainly operates within the international scientific research frameworks from which its fundamental questions were developed 4 Although the field has ties to social and cultural studies in its understanding of land and land change as a human environment system land change science also focuses on ecosystems and earth systems structure function and effects on land change independent of human activity Land change science encompasses a broad scope of dimensions ranging from quantifying the ecological effects of land cover change to understanding the socio environmental drivers for land use decisions at an institutional level 5 As a result land change science relies heavily on the synthesis of a wide range of data and a diverse range of data collection methods some of which are detailed below 5 Land cover monitoring and assessments Edit A primary function of land change science is to document and model long term patterns of landscape change which may result from both human activity and natural processes 6 In the course of monitoring and assessing land cover and land use changes scientists look at several factors including where land cover and land use are changing the extent and timescale of changes and how changes vary through time 7 To this end scientists use a variety of tools including satellite imagery and other sources of remotely sensed data e g aircraft imagery field observations historical accounts and reconstruction modeling 6 These tools particularly satellite imagery allow land change scientists to accurately monitor land change rates and create a consistent long term record to quantify change variability over time 7 Through observing patterns in land cover changes scientists can determine the consequences of these changes predict the impact of future changes and use this information to inform strategic land management Aral Sea Edit nbsp Remote sensing images show changes to the extent of the Aral Sea from 1989 left to 2014 right The rapid decline of the Aral Sea is an example how local scale land use and land change can have compounded impacts on regional climate systems particularly when human activities heavily disrupt natural climatic cycles how land change science can be used to map and study such changes 2 In 1960 the Aral Sea located in Central Asia was the world s fourth largest lake 8 However a water diversion project undertaken by the Soviet Union to irrigate arid plains in what is now Kazakhstan Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan resulted in the Aral Sea losing 85 of its land cover and 90 of its volume 8 The loss of the Aral Sea has had a significant effect on human environment interactions in the region including the decimation of the sea s fishing industry and the salinization of agricultural lands by the wind spread of dried sea salt beds 2 8 Additionally scientists have been able to use technology such as NASA s Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer MODIS to track changes to the Aral Sea and its surrounding climate over time 9 This use of modeling and satellite imagery to track human caused land cover change is characteristic of the scope of land change science Risk and vulnerability Edit Modeling risk and vulnerability is also one of land change science s practical applications Accurate predictions of how human activity will influence land cover change over time as well as the impact that such changes have on the sustainability of ecological and human systems can inform the creation of policy designed to address these changes 10 Studying risk and vulnerability in the context of land change science entails the development of quantitative qualitative and geospatial models methods and support tools 11 The purpose of these tools is to communicate the vulnerability of both human communities and natural ecosystems to hazard events or long term land change Modeling risk and vulnerability requires analyses of community sensitivity to hazards an understanding of geographic distributions of people and infrastructure and accurate calculation of the probability of specific disturbances occurring 11 Land change modeling Edit A key method for studying risk and vulnerability in the context of land change science is land change modeling LCM which can be used to simulate changes and land use and land cover 12 LCMs can be used to predict how land use and land cover may change under alternate circumstances which is useful for risk assessment in that it allows for the prediction of potential impacts and can be used to inform policy decisions albeit with some uncertainty 12 Human impact and land change science EditAlthough land change science involves quantifying the location extent and variability of land change cover and the analysis of emergent patterns it remains fundamentally interdisciplinary including social and economic components 7 Human activity is not only the most significant cause of land cover change but humans are also directly impacted by the environmental consequences of these changes 7 Collective land use and land cover changes have fundamentally altered the functioning of key Earth systems 13 For instance human changes to land use and land cover have a profound impact climate at a local and regional level which in turn contributes to global warming 13 More generally maximizing natural resources and ecosystem services for short term benefits often hinders the long term resilience of ecosystems and in turn their ability to support human needs 13 Given the important role that humans play in land cover change and to understand land change patterns and their affect the climate land change scientists must identify the social and economic drivers of historic land change Below are some examples of land use and land cover change that play a key role in the social and economic dimensions of land change science Tropical deforestation Edit nbsp Rainforest deforestation for land use conversionDeforestation in the context of land change science is the systematic and permanent conversion of previously forested land for other uses 14 It has historically been a primary facilitator of land use and land cover change is a particular focus of land change science 10 Forests are a vital part of the global ecosystem and are essential to carbon capture ecological processes and biodiversity 10 However since the invention of agriculture global forest cover has diminished by 35 10 Further tropical forests in particular support at least two thirds of the world s biodiversity and sustained changes in land cover in these regions are believed to be contributing to a mass extinction 15 Given the severe ecological consequences resulting from human driven forest land use conversion as well as the continuing downward trend in forest cover to effectively model and evaluate patterns of land use change scientists must also study the social and economic drivers of deforestation itself Land use and land cover change resulting from deforestation is primarily the effect of large scale socio economic processes Importantly there is rarely one direct or underlying cause for deforestation 16 Rather deforestation is the result of intertwining systemic forces working simultaneously or sequentially to change land cover 16 For instance mass deforestation is often viewed as the product of industrial agriculture yet a considerable portion old growth forest deforestation is the result of small scale migrant farming 17 As forest cover is removed forest resources become exhausted and increasing populations lead to scarcity which prompts people to move again to previously undisturbed forest restarting the process of deforestation 17 This process is referred to as rural to rural migration 17 There are several reasons behind this continued migration poverty driven lack of available farmland and high costs may lead to an increase in farming intensity on existing farmland 17 This leads to the overexploitation of farmland and down the line results in desertification another land cover change which renders soil unusable and unprofitable requiring farmers to seek out untouched and unpopulated old growth forests 17 In addition to rural migration and subsistence farming economic development can also play a substantial role in deforestation 16 For example road and railway expansions designed to increase quality of life have resulted in significant deforestation in the Amazon and Central America 16 Moreover the underlying drivers of economic development are often linked to global economic engagement instead of to poverty ranging from increased exports to a foreign debt 16 Deforestation occurs for many interconnected reasons and thus it is important for land change scientists to track it in order to identify patterns that can shed light on why and when it happens Phenomena such as economic insecurity and rural migration are not necessarily quantitative but they nevertheless provide valuable information to land change science models that attempt to predict future land cover change and its consequences Urbanization Edit nbsp An aerial image of New Delhi India one of the world s largest urban areasBroadly urbanization is the increasing number of people who live in urban areas In the context of land change science urbanization refers to both urban population growth and the physical growth of urban areas 18 According to the United Nations the global urban population has increased rapidly since 1950 from 751 million to 4 2 billion in 2018 and current trends predict this number will continue to grow 19 Accompanying this population shift are significant changes in economic flow culture and lifestyle and spatial population distribution 19 Although urbanized areas cover just 3 of the Earth s surface they nevertheless have a significant impact on land use and land cover change 20 Urbanization is important to land use and land cover change and therefore land change science for a variety of reasons In particular urbanization affects land change elsewhere through the shifting of urban rural linkages or the ecological footprint of the transfer of goods and services between urban and rural areas 13 Increases in urbanization lead to increases in consumption which puts increased pressure on surrounding rural lands 13 The outward spread of urban areas can also take over adjacent land formerly used for crop cultivation 13 Urban heat islands Edit Urbanization additionally affects land cover through the urban heat island effect Heat islands occur when due to high concentrations of structures such as buildings and roads that absorb and re emit solar radiation and low concentrations of vegetative cover urban areas experience higher temperatures than surrounding areas 21 Heat islands can cause increased energy consumption which results in higher rates of emission for greenhouse gases 21 The high temperatures associated with heat islands can also compromise human health particularly in low income areas 21 The effects of urban areas on climate indicate that urbanization may become a significant component of land change science Obstacles EditLand change science as a discipline faces several challenges many of the stemming from its interdisciplinary qualities or issues with developing inferences using aggregate data 22 For example land change science is limited by constraints on data and lack of understanding of underlying issues of land change 23 Specifically the spatial models frequently used to study land change may restricted by lack of access to public data on land change faulty sensors and high levels of variable uncertainty 23 Thus models are often only able to make short term projections which severely limits the level of prediction they can provide 23 Additionally it is difficult to synthesize and combine the case studies of social environmental systems that are essential to the study of land change on a global scale 24 Thus these setbacks pose fundamental challenges to the connection of communities and environment that land change science seeks to achieve 22 See also EditClimate Change Science ProgramReferences Edit Land Change Science Program Science www usgs gov Archived from the original on 2021 02 10 Retrieved 2021 02 09 a b c d e f g h Turner B L Lambin Eric F Reenberg Anette 2007 12 26 The emergence of land change science for global environmental change and sustainability Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 52 20666 20671 doi 10 1073 pnas 0704119104 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 2409212 PMID 18093934 a b Messerli Peter Heinimann Andreas Giger Markus Breu Thomas Schonweger Oliver 2013 10 01 From land grabbing to sustainable investments in land potential contributions by land change science Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 5 5 528 534 doi 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New York Routledge pp 179 182 ISBN 978 1 315 15840 2 World of Change Shrinking Aral Sea earthobservatory nasa gov 2014 09 24 Archived from the original on 2021 03 20 Retrieved 2021 03 08 a b c d Mayer Audrey L Buma Brian Davis Amelie Gagne Sara A Loudermilk E Louise Scheller Robert M Schmiegelow Fiona K A Wiersma Yolanda F Franklin Janet 2016 04 27 How Landscape Ecology Informs Global Land Change Science and Policy BioScience 66 6 458 469 doi 10 1093 biosci biw035 ISSN 0006 3568 a b Risk and Vulnerability USGS gov www usgs gov Archived from the original on 2021 01 25 Retrieved 2021 02 09 a b Van Vliet Jasper Bregt Arnold K Brown Daniel G Van Delden Hedwig Heckbert Scott Verburg Peter H 2016 08 01 A review of current calibration and validation practices in land change modeling Environmental Modelling amp Software 82 174 182 doi 10 1016 j envsoft 2016 04 017 ISSN 1364 8152 Archived from the original on 2021 04 18 Retrieved 2021 04 09 a b c d e f Lambin Eric F Turner B L Geist Helmut J Agbola Samuel B Angelsen Arild Bruce John W Coomes Oliver T Dirzo Rodolfo Fischer Gunther Folke Carl George P S Homewood Katherine Imbernon Jacques Leemans Rik Li Xiubin Moran Emilio F Mortimore Michael Ramakrishnan P S Richards John F Skanes Helle Steffen Will Stone Glenn D Svedin Uno Veldkamp Tom A Vogel Coleen Xu Jianchu 2001 12 01 The causes of land use and land cover change moving beyond the myths Global Environmental Change 11 4 261 269 doi 10 1016 S0959 3780 01 00007 3 ISSN 0959 3780 Archived from the original on 2020 07 05 Retrieved 2021 04 09 November 2019 Sarah Derouin Live Science Contributor 06 Deforestation Facts Causes amp Effects livescience com Archived from the original on 2020 12 20 Retrieved 2021 03 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first has generic name help Giam Xingli 2017 06 06 Global biodiversity loss from tropical deforestation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114 23 5775 5777 Bibcode 2017PNAS 114 5775G doi 10 1073 pnas 1706264114 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 5468656 PMID 28550105 a b c d e Tropical Deforestation earthobservatory nasa gov 2007 03 30 Archived from the original on 2021 03 31 Retrieved 2021 04 08 a b c d e Lopez Carr David Burgdorfer Jason 2013 01 01 Deforestation Drivers Population Migration and Tropical Land Use Environment Science and Policy for Sustainable Development 55 1 3 11 doi 10 1080 00139157 2013 748385 ISSN 0013 9157 PMC 3857132 PMID 24347675 Urbanization ScienceDaily Archived from the original on 2021 01 13 Retrieved 2021 04 09 a b United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division 2019 World Urbanization Prospects 2018 Highlights ST ESA SER A 421 Liu Zhifeng He Chunyang Zhou Yuyu Wu Jianguo May 2014 How much of the world s land has been urbanized really A hierarchical framework for avoiding confusion Landscape Ecology 29 5 763 771 doi 10 1007 s10980 014 0034 y ISSN 0921 2973 S2CID 207209868 a b c US EPA OAR 2014 02 28 Heat Island Effect US EPA Archived from the original on 2021 04 07 Retrieved 2021 04 09 a b Rindfuss Ronald R Walsh Stephen J Turner B L Fox Jefferson Mishra Vinod 2004 09 28 Developing a science of land change Challenges and methodological issues Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101 39 13976 13981 Bibcode 2004PNAS 10113976R doi 10 1073 pnas 0401545101 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 521107 PMID 15383671 a b c Council National Research 2013 09 16 Advancing Land Change Modeling Opportunities and Research Requirements doi 10 17226 18385 ISBN 978 0 309 28833 0 Archived from the original on 2021 04 16 Retrieved 2021 04 16 GLOBE Global Collaboration Engine Land Change Science Archived from the original on 2021 04 16 Retrieved 2021 04 16 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Land change science amp oldid 1147327619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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