1 research outputs found
Scenarios of land-use change in a deforestation corridor in the Brazilian Amazon: combining two scales of analysis
Local, regional, and global processes affect
deforestation and land-use changes in the Brazilian Amazon.
Characteristics are: direct conversions from forest to
pasture; regional processes of indirect land-use change,
described by the conversion of pastures to cropland, which
increases the demand for pastures elsewhere; and teleconnections,
fueled by the global demands for soybeans as
animal fodder. We modeled land-use changes for two
scenarios Trend and Sustainable Development for a hot
spot of land-use change along the BR-163 highway in Mato
Grosso and Para´, Brazil. We investigated the differences
between a coupled modeling approach, which incorporates
indirect land-use change processes, and a noncoupled landuse
model. We coupled the regional-scale LandSHIFT
model, defined for Mato Grosso and Para´, with a subregional
model, alucR, covering a selected corridor along the
BR-163. The results indicated distinct land-use scenario
outcomes from the coupled modeling approach and the
subregional model quantification. We found the highest
deforestation estimates returned from the subregional
quantification of the Trend scenario. This originated from
the strong local dynamics of past deforestation and landuse
changes. Land-use changes exceeded the demands
estimated at regional scale. We observed the lowest
deforestation estimates at the subregional quantification of
the Sustainable Development story line. We highlight that
model coupling increased the representation of scenario
outcomes at fine resolution while providing consistency
across scales. However, distinct local dynamics were
explicitly captured at subregional scale. The scenario result
pinpoints the importance of policies to aim at the cattle
ranching sector, to increase land tenure registration and
enforcement of environmental laws.Peer Reviewe