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Scientific concepts for an integrated analysis of desertification

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Date
2011-03-01
Authors
Reynolds, JF
Grainger, A
Stafford Smith, DM
Bastin, G
Garcia-Barrios, L
Fernández, RJ
Janssen, MA
Jürgens, N
Scholes, RJ
Veldkamp, A
Verstraete, MM
Von Maltitz, G
Zdruli, P
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Abstract
The Global Drylands Observing System proposed in this issue should reduce the huge uncertainty about the extent of desertification and the rate at which it is changing, and provide valuable information to scientists, planners and policy-makers. However, it needs careful design if information outputs are to be scientifically credible and salient to the needs of people living in dry areas. Its design would benefit from a robust, integrated scientific framework like the Dryland Development Paradigm to guide/inform the development of an integrated global monitoring and assessment programme (both directly and indirectly via the use of modelling). Various types of dryland system models (e.g. environmental, socioeconomic, land-use cover change, and agent-based) could provide insights into how to combine the plethora of monitoring information gathered on key socioeconomic and biophysical indicators to develop integrated assessment models. This paper shows how insights from models can help in selecting and integrating indicators, interpreting synthetic trends, incorporating cross-scalar processes, representing spatio-temporal variation, and evaluating uncertainty. Planners could use this integrated global monitoring and assessment programme to help implement effective policies to address the global problem of desertification. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Type
Journal article
Subject
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Environmental Sciences
Soil Science
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Agriculture
Global Drylands Observing System
modelling degradation
desertification
UNCCD
Dryland Development Paradigm
slow variables
drylands
thresholds
integrated assessment
ecosystem services
LAND-COVER CHANGE
SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
CLIMATE-CHANGE
MULTIAGENT SYSTEMS
SOUTHERN KALAHARI
EXTREME EVENTS
MINQIN COUNTY
COUPLED HUMAN
DEGRADATION
MANAGEMENT
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24237
Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1002/ldr.1104
Publication Info
Reynolds, JF; Grainger, A; Stafford Smith, DM; Bastin, G; Garcia-Barrios, L; Fernández, RJ; ... Zdruli, P (2011). Scientific concepts for an integrated analysis of desertification. Land Degradation and Development, 22(2). pp. 166-183. 10.1002/ldr.1104. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24237.
This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Scholars@Duke

Reynolds

James F. Reynolds

Professor Emeritus
Integrated assessment of complex human-environmental systems; Land degradation and desertification in global drylands; Conceptual frameworks and models to advance the science of dryland development
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