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Deforestation Part 3: Top-down Modelling Pedro R. Andrade São José dos Campos, 2013.

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Presentation on theme: "Deforestation Part 3: Top-down Modelling Pedro R. Andrade São José dos Campos, 2013."— Presentation transcript:

1 Deforestation Part 3: Top-down Modelling Pedro R. Andrade São José dos Campos, 2013

2 Representing the process How to develop a deforestation model?

3 Modelling and Public Policy System Ecology Economy Politics Scenarios Decision Maker Desired System State External Influences Policy Options

4 Models need to be Calibrated and “Validated” t p - 20 t p - 10 tptp Calibration Validation t p + 10 Scenario Source: Cláudia Almeida

5 Top-down Land Change Models Demand submodel Transition potential submodel Change allocation submodel Land use at t Land use at t+1 Time loop How much? Where? Input data

6 Transition Matrix (Markov chain) Global economic model Trend analysis Building Scenarios Demand

7 Simple Demand Demand submodel Difference between years

8 Potential map Driving factors Neural Network Multivariate Statistics Mathematics Potential Transition potential submodel

9 Potential map Potential – CLUE like Transition potential submodel Protected Areas Roads Ports Deforestation Subtract from Deforestation

10 Potential map at t Landscape map at t Landscape map at t+1 Demand t+1 Rank-order Stochastic Iterative Allocation submodel Allocation

11 deforestation.lua Three strategies for computing potential:  Neighborhood: Based on the average deforestation of the neighbors  Regression: Based on distance to roads, ports, and protected area  Mixed: Based on these four attributes Fixed yearly demand

12 Goodness-of-fit Source: Costanza, 1989

13 Goodness-of-fit: Multilevel Source: Costanza, 1989

14 Fit According to Window Size

15 Exercise  Use the PRODES data as yearly demand (from “total-prodes.lua”)  Compute the final real deforestation summing up the deforestation data in 2001 with the yearly PRODES until 2011  Use the multi-resolution metric to calibrate the different potential strategies by changing the weights manually (see an example of computing the goodness-of-fit in “check-fit.lua”)  Is it possible to be better than the allocation from the potential based only on the neighborhood?

16 Land Change Models x Cellular Automata  Grid of cells  Neighbourhood  Finite set of discrete states  Finite set of transition rules  Initial state  Discrete time  Behavior parallel in space  Read from the neighbors and write in the cell Can a top-down land change model be considered a Cellular Automata?


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