Holman I P, Brown C, Janes V, Sandars D
School of Water, Energy and Environment, Cranfield University, Cranfield, Bedford MK43 0AL, UK.
School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, UK.
Agric Syst. 2017 Feb;151:126-135. doi: 10.1016/j.agsy.2016.12.001.
The global land system is facing unprecedented pressures from growing human populations and climatic change. Understanding the effects these pressures may have is necessary to designing land management strategies that ensure food security, ecosystem service provision and successful climate mitigation and adaptation. However, the number of complex, interacting effects involved makes any complete understanding very difficult to achieve. Nevertheless, the recent development of integrated modelling frameworks allows for the exploration of the co-development of human and natural systems under scenarios of global change, potentially illuminating the main drivers and processes in future land system change. Here, we use one such integrated modelling framework (the CLIMSAVE Integrated Assessment Platform) to investigate the range of projected outcomes in the European land system across climatic and socio-economic scenarios for the 2050s. We find substantial consistency in locations and types of change even under the most divergent conditions, with results suggesting that climate change alone will lead to a contraction in the agricultural and forest area within Europe, particularly in southern Europe. This is partly offset by the introduction of socioeconomic changes that change both the demand for agricultural production, through changing food demand and net imports, and the efficiency of agricultural production. Simulated extensification and abandonment in the Mediterranean region is driven by future decreases in the relative profitability of the agricultural sector in southern Europe, owing to decreased productivity as a consequence of increased heat and drought stress and reduced irrigation water availability. The very low likelihood (< 33% probability) that current land use proportions in many parts of Europe will remain unchanged suggests that future policy should seek to promote and support the multifunctional role of agriculture and forests in different European regions, rather than focusing on increased productivity as a route to agricultural and forestry viability.
全球土地系统正面临着来自不断增长的人口和气候变化的前所未有的压力。了解这些压力可能产生的影响对于设计确保粮食安全、生态系统服务供应以及成功实现气候缓解和适应的土地管理策略至关重要。然而,所涉及的复杂相互作用效应的数量使得很难完全理解。尽管如此,综合建模框架的最新发展使得在全球变化情景下探索人类和自然系统的共同发展成为可能,这可能会揭示未来土地系统变化的主要驱动因素和过程。在此,我们使用这样一个综合建模框架(CLIMSAVE综合评估平台)来研究2050年代欧洲土地系统在气候和社会经济情景下的预测结果范围。我们发现,即使在最不同的条件下,变化的地点和类型也存在很大的一致性,结果表明仅气候变化就将导致欧洲农业和森林面积的收缩,特别是在南欧。社会经济变化的引入部分抵消了这种收缩,社会经济变化通过改变粮食需求和净进口来改变对农业生产的需求,并改变农业生产效率。地中海地区模拟的土地扩张和弃耕是由南欧农业部门未来相对盈利能力的下降驱动的,这是由于高温和干旱压力增加以及灌溉用水可用性降低导致生产力下降。欧洲许多地区目前的土地利用比例保持不变的可能性非常低(概率<33%),这表明未来的政策应寻求促进和支持农业和森林在欧洲不同地区的多功能作用,而不是将重点放在提高生产力作为农业和林业生存能力的途径上。