Title: Envisioning Skagit Alternative Futures
1Envisioning Skagit Alternative Futures
John Bolte Biological and Ecological Engineering
Department Oregon State University
2Alternative Futures Projects
- Examine multiple scenarios of trends and
assumptions about future conditions, generally
using one or more models of change, - Assist in incorporating stakeholder interactions
to define goals, constraints, trajectories,
drivers, outcomes - Allow visualization of the results in a variety
of types and formats - Ultimately are intended to assist in improving
land management decision-making and informing
choices
3An Approach to Projecting Alternative Future
Landscapes
- Based on modeling behavior and actions of
individual land owners/land managers (actors) - Our approach spatially explicit, represents land
management decisions of those with authority over
parcels of land - Actor decisions implemented through policies that
guide constrain potential actions - Autonomous processes (e.g. succession)
simultaneously modeled
4Envision Conceptual Structure
Actors Decision-makers managing the landscape by
selecting policies responsive to their objectives
Landscape Production Models Generating Landscape
Metrics Reflecting Ecosystem Service Productions
LandscapeFeedbacks
Landscape Spatial Container in
which landscape
changes, ES Metrics are
depicted
Multiagent Decision-making Select policies and
generate land management decision affecting
landscape pattern
Scenario Definition
LandscapeFeedbacks
Policies Fundamental Descriptors of constraints
and actions defining land use management
decisionmaking
Autonomous Change Processes Models of
Non-anthropogenic Landscape Change
5ENVISION Triad of Relationships
Goals
Actors
Policies
Values
Intentions
- Economic Services
- Ecosystem Services
- Socio-cultural Services
Provide a common frame of reference for actors,
policies and landscape productions
Landscapes
Metrics of Production
6Policy Definition
- Landscape policies are decisions or plans of
action for accomplishing desired outcomes. - from
- Lackey, R.T. 2006. Axioms of ecological policy.
Fisheries. 31(6) 286-290.
7Policies in ENVISION
- Policies are a decision or plan of action for
accomplishing a desired outcome they are a
fundamental unit of computation in Evoland - Describe actions available to actors
- Primary Characteristics
- Applicable Site Attributes (Spatial Query)
- Effectiveness of the Policy (determined by
evaluative models) - Outcomes (possible multiple) associated with the
selection and application of the Policy - Example Purchase conservations easement to
allow revegetation of degraded riparian areas in
areas with no built structures and high channel
migration capacity when native fish habitat
becomes scarce
8Models in ENVISION
- Models are plug-ins of two types
- Autonomous Processes Represent processes
causing landscape changes independent of human
decision-making e.g. climate change, vegetative
succession, forest growth, fire, flooding, ??? - Evaluative Models Generate production
statistics and report back how well the landscape
is doing a producing metrics of interest e.g.
carbon sequestration, habitat production, land
availability, risk, ???
9Models in ENVISION
- A well-defined, relatively simple, yet robust
interface specification is defined for both
Autonomous Processes and Evaluative Models. - Models can expose input and output variables
- Models have full access to the underlying spatial
representation, policy sets, exposed variables,
actor representation, and spatial engine - Models can make changes to the underlying
landscape representation - Envision automatically manages all exposed model
data
10ENVISION FrameworkAndrews Application
Data Sources
Evaluative Models
Parcels (IDUs)
Mean Age at Harvest
Policy Set(s)
Carbon Sequestration
Agent Descriptors
Forest Products Extraction
ENVISION
Autonomous Process Models
Harvested Acreage
Rural Residential Expansion
Fish Habitat (IBI)
Vegetative Succession
Resource Lands Protection
Climate Change
11Envision Andrews Study Area
12Envision Andrews - Scenarios
- Conservation - no Climate Change
- Development - no Climate Change
- Conservation - with Climate Change
- Development - with Climate Change
13Demonstration
14Scenario Results Forest Carbon
15Scenario Results Forest Product Extraction
16Scenario Results Fish IBI
17A possible approach for the Skagit
- Use a mixture of parcel-level data, land use/land
cover, and zoning to establish decision units
(IDU coverage) - Develop sets of policy alternatives, focusing on
those landscape areas of primary interest to the
project, and addressing land management
alternatives that represents a range of possible
management approaches - Define several scenarios reflecting 1) plan trend
, and 2) scenarios addressing key stakeholder
alternatives in terms of alternative policy sets - Evaluate the resulting landscape trajectories
with defensible models of key metrics relevant to
stakeholder goals.