Satake Akiko, Rudel Thomas K
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2007 Oct;17(7):2024-36. doi: 10.1890/07-0283.1.
An historical generalization about forest cover change in which rapid deforestation gives way over time to forest restoration is called "the forest transition." Prior research on the forest transition leaves three important questions unanswered: (1) How does forest loss influence an individual landowner's incentives to reforest? (2) How does the forest recovery rate affect the likelihood of forest transition? (3) What happens after the forest transition occurs? The purpose of this paper is to develop a minimum model of the forest transition to answer these questions. We assume that deforestation caused by landowners' decisions and forest regeneration initiated by agricultural abandonment have aggregated effects that characterize entire landscapes. These effects include feedback mechanisms called the "forest scarcity" and "ecosystem service" hypotheses. In the forest scarcity hypothesis, forest losses make forest products scarcer, which increases the economic value of forests. In the ecosystem service hypothesis, the environmental degradation that accompanies the loss of forests causes the value of ecosystem services provided by forests to decline. We examined the impact of each mechanism on the likelihood of forest transition through an investigation of the equilibrium and stability of landscape dynamics. We found that the forest transition occurs only when landowners employ a low rate of future discounting. After the forest transition, regenerated forests are protected in a sustainable way if forests regenerate slowly. When forests regenerate rapidly, the forest scarcity hypothesis expects instability in which cycles of large-scale deforestation followed by forest regeneration repeatedly characterize the landscape. In contrast, the ecosystem service hypothesis predicts a catastrophic shift from a forested to an abandoned landscape when the amount of deforestation exceeds the critical level, which can lead to a resource degrading poverty trap. These findings imply that incentives for forest conservation seem stronger in settings where forests regenerate slowly as well as when decision makers value the future.
一种关于森林覆盖变化的历史概括,即快速的森林砍伐随着时间推移让位于森林恢复,被称为“森林转型”。先前关于森林转型的研究留下了三个重要问题未得到解答:(1)森林损失如何影响个体土地所有者重新造林的动机?(2)森林恢复率如何影响森林转型的可能性?(3)森林转型发生后会怎样?本文的目的是建立一个森林转型的最小模型来回答这些问题。我们假设土地所有者决策导致的森林砍伐和农业弃耕引发的森林再生具有表征整个景观的综合效应。这些效应包括被称为“森林稀缺”和“生态系统服务”假说的反馈机制。在森林稀缺假说中,森林损失使林产品变得更加稀缺,这增加了森林的经济价值。在生态系统服务假说中,森林损失伴随的环境退化导致森林提供的生态系统服务价值下降。我们通过研究景观动态的平衡和稳定性,考察了每种机制对森林转型可能性的影响。我们发现,只有当土地所有者采用低未来贴现率时,森林转型才会发生。森林转型后,如果森林再生缓慢,再生森林将以可持续的方式得到保护。当森林快速再生时,森林稀缺假说预计会出现不稳定状态,即大规模森林砍伐后接着森林再生的循环反复表征景观。相比之下,生态系统服务假说预测,当森林砍伐量超过临界水平时,会出现从森林景观到弃耕景观的灾难性转变,这可能导致资源退化的贫困陷阱。这些发现意味着,在森林再生缓慢的环境中以及决策者重视未来的情况下,森林保护的激励措施似乎更强。