A software coupling approach to assess low-cost soil conservation strategies for highland agriculture in Vietnam
- Publication Type
- Journal contribution (peer reviewed)
- Authors
- Marohn, C., Schreinemachers, P., Quang, D. V., Berger, T., Siripalangkanont, P., Nguyen, T. T., Cadisch, G.
- Year of publication
- 2013
- Published in
- Environmental Modelling and Software
- Band/Volume
- 45/
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.envsoft.2012.03.020
- Page (from - to)
- 116-128
- Keywords
- sustainability
Soil degradation is an environmental process mainly caused by land use decision-makers that has substantial feedback effects on livelihoods and the environment. To capture these feedback effects and the resulting human-environment interactions, we used an agent-based modeling approach to couple two software packages that simulate soil, water and plant dynamics (LUCIA), and farm decision-making (MP-MAS). We show that such a software coupling approach has advantages over hard-coded model integration as applied by most other comparable studies, as it facilitates combining of increasingly sophisticated individual models and can achieve a well-balanced representation of agricultural systems. Using a numerical application for a small mountainous watershed in northwest Vietnam we show the challenges in model coupling, calibration and partial validation, and explore the properties of the coupled model system. Scenario analysis covering the introduction of low-cost soil conservation techniques indicates that some of these techniques would have an impact on soil erosion, maize productivity and household income levels in the study catchment area under current conditions. However, maize yields and the adoption of soil conservation appear to be sensitive to the price of mineral fertilizers, with lower fertilizer prices impeding the adoption of soil conservation measures. The software coupling approach was able to capture interactions between decision-makers and natural resources, as well as the level of spatial variability, in more detail than the individual models. Still, the greater number of endogenous variables and thus degrees of freedom increased the importance of validation and testing parameter sensitivity of the results
Involved persons
Involved institutions
- Institute of Agricultural Sciences in the Tropics (Hans-Ruthenberg-Institute)
- Agronomy in the Tropics and Subtropics
- Land Use Economics in the Tropics and Subtropics (Josef G. Knoll Professorship)
- Hohenheim Research Center for Bioeconomy
- Food Security Center
- Hohenheim Tropen
- Bioeconomic Modelling
Projects in the course of the publication
- DFG-SFB: Assessment of innovations and sustainability strategies (G1)
- IDRC: Innovations and Sustainability Strategies in Upland Agriculture of Northern Vietnam
- Scientific Software Project MPMAS
- SFB564-C4.2: Impact of intensification on land use dynamics and environmental services of tropical mountainous watersheds