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Publikationstyp

Teil eines Buches

Erscheinungsjahr

2019
'http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/'

Selected Trade-Offs and risks associated with land use transitions in central Germany

Herausgeber

Quelle

Atlas of ecosystem services
(2019)

Schlagwörter

Landwirtschaft, Flächennutzungswandel

Forschungskennzahl (FKZ)

Verbundene Publikation

Zitation

PRIESS, Jörg A., Christian HOYER, Greta JÄCKEL und Christian SCHWEITZER, 2019. Selected Trade-Offs and risks associated with land use transitions in central Germany. In: Atlas of ecosystem services [online]. Verfügbar unter: https://openumwelt.de/handle/123456789/5390
Zusammenfassung englisch
Future uncertainties and risks for socio-environmental systems are often addressed in the form of scenarios. This study aims to identify the biggest future risks and uncertainties for the study region Central Germany and the question which land use changes and impacts on selected ecosystem services related to agricultural production can be expected in the coming decades. For this purpose, we co-developed scenario storylines along the largest uncertainties, how the region may change with different stakeholders and used environmental models to simulate land-use changes and impacts on selected ecosystem services related to agricultural production. The study revealed that Climate change may have beneficial (e.g. maize, sugar beet) or adverse effects (e.g. barley, wheat) on crop yield levels, depending on crop type and level of climate change. In the scenarios crop production is additionally influenced by different levels of regional preferences influencing crop land extent (e.g., afforestation), crop management (e.g., organic production), and crop types used for food or bioenergy production. As driving factors such as climate change, land availability, and land management all influence agriculture, integrated studies like this are needed to assess future crop production. However, sustainability objectives may prefer other than the most productive agricultural pathways providing additional benefits such as regulating or cultural services. © Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature 2019