Passar para o conteúdo principal

page search

Biblioteca How to Make a Barranco: Modeling Erosion and Land-Use in Mediterranean Landscapes

How to Make a Barranco: Modeling Erosion and Land-Use in Mediterranean Landscapes

How to Make a Barranco: Modeling Erosion and Land-Use in Mediterranean Landscapes

Resource information

Date of publication
Setembro 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
10.3390/land4030578
License of the resource

We use the hybrid modeling laboratory of the Mediterranean Landscape Dynamics (MedLanD) Project to simulate barranco incision in eastern Spain under different scenarios of natural and human environmental change. We carry out a series of modeling experiments set in the Rio Penaguila valley of northern Alicante Province. The MedLanD Modeling Laboratory (MML) is able to realistically simulate gullying and incision in a multi-dimensional, spatially explicit virtual landscape. We first compare erosion modeled in wooded and denuded landscapes in the absence of human land-use. We then introduce simulated small-holder (e.g., prehistoric Neolithic) farmer/herders in six experiments, by varying community size (small, medium, large) and land management strategy (satisficing and maximizing). We compare the amount and location of erosion under natural and anthropogenic conditions. Natural (e.g., climatically induced) land-cover change produces a distinctly different signature of landscape evolution than does land-cover change produced by agropastoral land-use. Human land-use induces increased coupling between hillslopes and channels, resulting in increased downstream incision.

Share on RLBI navigator
NO

Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Barton, M. C.
Ullah, Isaac
Heimsath, Arjun

Publisher(s)
Data Provider
Geographical focus