Modeling the forest transition: Forest scarcity and ecosystem service hypotheses

被引:47
作者
Satake, Akiko
Rudel, Thomas K.
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolut Biol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
[2] Rutgers State Univ, Dept Human Ecol & Sociol, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA
关键词
catastrophic shift; decision making; deforestation; discount rate; forest transition; land use; poverty trap; reforestation;
D O I
10.1890/07-0283.1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
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.
引用
收藏
页码:2024 / 2036
页数:13
相关论文
共 58 条
[21]   Evolutionary game dynamics [J].
Hofbauer, J ;
Sigmund, K .
BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY, 2003, 40 (04) :479-519
[22]   Annual fluxes or carbon from deforestation and regrowth in the Brazilian Amazon [J].
Houghton, RA ;
Skole, DL ;
Nobre, CA ;
Hackler, JL ;
Lawrence, KT ;
Chomentowski, WH .
NATURE, 2000, 403 (6767) :301-304
[23]  
HYDE WF, 1980, TIMBER SUPPLY LAND A
[25]   Environment and development -: Sustainability science [J].
Kates, RW ;
Clark, WC ;
Corell, R ;
Hall, JM ;
Jaeger, CC ;
Lowe, I ;
McCarthy, JJ ;
Schellnhuber, HJ ;
Bolin, B ;
Dickson, NM ;
Faucheux, S ;
Gallopin, GC ;
Grübler, A ;
Huntley, B ;
Jäger, J ;
Jodha, NS ;
Kasperson, RE ;
Mabogunje, A ;
Matson, P ;
Mooney, H ;
Moore, B ;
O'Riordan, T ;
Svedin, U .
SCIENCE, 2001, 292 (5517) :641-642
[26]   Returning forests analyzed with the forest identity [J].
Kauppi, Pekka E. ;
Ausubel, Jesse H. ;
Fang, Jingyun ;
Mather, Alexander S. ;
Sedjo, Roger A. ;
Waggoner, Paul E. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (46) :17574-17579
[27]   EFFECTS OF FOREST FRAGMENTATION ON DUNG AND CARRION BEETLE COMMUNITIES IN CENTRAL AMAZONIA [J].
KLEIN, BC .
ECOLOGY, 1989, 70 (06) :1715-1725
[28]   Is there an environmental Kuznets curve for deforestation? [J].
Koop, G ;
Tole, L .
JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 1999, 58 (01) :231-244
[29]  
Kuznets S, 1955, AM ECON REV, V45, P1
[30]   POVERTY AND THE RATE OF TIME PREFERENCE - EVIDENCE FROM PANEL DATA [J].
LAWRANCE, EC .
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, 1991, 99 (01) :54-77