Emma H. van der Zanden
VU University Amsterdam
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emma H. van der Zanden.
Landscape Ecology | 2013
Peter H. Verburg; Sanneke van Asselen; Emma H. van der Zanden; Elke Stehfest
Landscape ecology has provided valuable insights in the relations between spatial structure and the functioning of landscapes. However, in most global scale environmental assessments the representation of landscapes is reduced to the dominant land cover within a 0.5 degree pixel, disregarding the insights about the role of structure, pattern and composition for the functioning of the landscape. This paper discusses the contributions landscape ecology can make to global scale environmental assessments. It proposes new directions for representing landscape characteristics at broad spatial scales. A contribution of landscape ecologists to the representation of landscape characteristics in global scale assessments will foster improved information and assessments for the design of sustainable earth system governance strategies.
Regional Environmental Change | 2018
Julia Stürck; Christian Levers; Emma H. van der Zanden; Catharina J.E. Schulp; Pieter Johannes Verkerk; Tobias Kuemmerle; John Helming; Hermann Lotze-Campen; A.A. Tabeau; Alexander Popp; Elizabeth Schrammeijer; Peter H. Verburg
Explorations of future land use change are important to understand potential conflicts between competing land uses, trade-offs associated with particular land change trajectories, and the effectiveness of policies to steer land systems into desirable states. Most model-based explorations and scenario studies focused on conversions in broad land use classes, but disregarded changes in land management or focused on individual sectors only. Using the European Union (EU) as a case study, we developed an approach to identifying typical combinations of land cover and management changes by combining the results of multimodel simulations in the agriculture and forest sectors for four scenarios from 2000 to 2040. We visualized land change trajectories by mapping regional hotspots of change. Land change trajectories differed in extent and spatial pattern across the EU and among scenarios, indicating trajectory-specific option spaces for alternative land system outcomes. In spite of the large variation in the area of change, similar hotspots of land change were observed among the scenarios. All scenarios indicate a stronger polarization of land use in Europe, with a loss of multifunctional landscapes. We analyzed locations subject to change by comparing location characteristics associated with certain land change trajectories. Results indicate differences in the location conditions of different land change trajectories, with diverging impacts on ecosystem service provisioning. Policy and planning for future land use needs to account for the spatial variation of land change trajectories to achieve both overarching and location-specific targets.
Regional Environmental Change | 2018
Pieter Johannes Verkerk; Marcus Lindner; Marta Pérez-Soba; James Paterson; John Helming; Peter H. Verburg; Tobias Kuemmerle; Hermann Lotze-Campen; Alexander Moiseyev; Daniel Müller; Alexander Popp; Catharina J.E. Schulp; Julia Stürck; A.A. Tabeau; Bernhard Wolfslehner; Emma H. van der Zanden
Plausible scenarios of future land use derived from model projections may differ substantially from what is actually desired by society, and identifying such mismatches is important for identifying policies to resolve them. This paper presents an approach to link explorative projections of future land use for the European Union to normative visions of desired land-use futures. We used the results of 24 scenario projections obtained from seven linked simulation models to explore uncertainty in future land-use developments. Land-use projections were linked to statements made by stakeholders for three normative visions of desired, future land use. The visions differed in the scale of multifunctionality of land use: at European (Best Land in Europe), regional (Regional Connected) or local (Local Multifunctional) level. To identify pathways to these visions, we analysed in which cases projected land-use changes matched with the land-use changes desired in the visions. We identified five pathways to the vision Regional Connected, two pathways to the vision Best Land in Europe, but no pathway to the vision Local Multifunctional. Our results suggest that policies have the ability to change the development of land use such that it is more in line with land-use futures desired by society. We believe our approach represents an interesting avenue for foresight studies on land use, as it combines the credibility from explorative scenarios with legitimacy and saliency of normative visions.
Regional Environmental Change | 2018
Hermann Lotze-Campen; Peter H. Verburg; Alexander Popp; Marcus Lindner; Pieter Johannes Verkerk; Alexander Moiseyev; Elizabeth Schrammeijer; John Helming; A.A. Tabeau; Catharina J.E. Schulp; Emma H. van der Zanden; Carlo Lavalle; Filipe Batista e Silva; Ariane Walz; Benjamin Leon Bodirsky
Protection of natural or semi-natural ecosystems is an important part of societal strategies for maintaining biodiversity, ecosystem services, and achieving overall sustainable development. The assessment of multiple emerging land use trade-offs is complicated by the fact that land use changes occur and have consequences at local, regional, and even global scale. Outcomes also depend on the underlying socio-economic trends. We apply a coupled, multi-scale modelling system to assess an increase in nature protection areas as a key policy option in the European Union (EU). The main goal of the analysis is to understand the interactions between policy-induced land use changes across different scales and sectors under two contrasting future socio-economic pathways. We demonstrate how complementary insights into land system change can be gained by coupling land use models for agriculture, forestry, and urban areas for Europe, in connection with other world regions. The simulated policy case of nature protection shows how the allocation of a certain share of total available land to newly protected areas, with specific management restrictions imposed, may have a range of impacts on different land-based sectors until the year 2040. Agricultural land in Europe is slightly reduced, which is partly compensated for by higher management intensity. As a consequence of higher costs, total calorie supply per capita is reduced within the EU. While wood harvest is projected to decrease, carbon sequestration rates increase in European forests. At the same time, imports of industrial roundwood from other world regions are expected to increase. Some of the aggregate effects of nature protection have very different implications at the local to regional scale in different parts of Europe. Due to nature protection measures, agricultural production is shifted from more productive land in Europe to on average less productive land in other parts of the world. This increases, at the global level, the allocation of land resources for agriculture, leading to a decrease in tropical forest areas, reduced carbon stocks, and higher greenhouse gas emissions outside of Europe. The integrated modelling framework provides a method to assess the land use effects of a single policy option while accounting for the trade-offs between locations, and between regional, European, and global scales.
Regional Environmental Change | 2018
Emma H. van der Zanden; Sónia M. Carvalho-Ribeiro; Peter H. Verburg
Land abandonment is an important process for the European Union, which primarily occurs in less productive, remote and mountainous areas with unfavourable conditions for agriculture. Future management directions of these abandonment areas are under debate, with increasing calls to adjust policies to the local characteristics, including the promotion of rewilding and the management of succession of larger areas of less-productive land. While there is an increase in studies focusing on the environmental impacts of land abandonment, there are few studies that focus on the perceptions of abandonment by different user groups, even though an understanding of local perceptions, opportunities and trade-offs associated with changing land management is crucial for landscape-related policies and planning measures. In a case study in Northern Portugal, we used a combination of statements, photograph rating exercises and open questions to assess the perceptions of local inhabitants, visitors and experts regarding land abandonment and their preferences of different possible trajectories after abandonment. The results show that all user groups have a negative response towards abandonment and associate it mainly with negative emotions and the loss of heritage and traditions. The assessment of the different abandonment stages and outcomes clearly yielded different preferences and explanations, which can be used as input for finding a common ground for landscape management, reducing conflict and as a starting point for a more spatially targeted and nuanced management approach.
Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability | 2013
Tobias Kuemmerle; Karl-Heinz Erb; Patrick Meyfroidt; Daniel Müller; Peter H. Verburg; Stephan Estel; Helmut Haberl; Patrick Hostert; Martin Rudbeck Jepsen; Thomas Kastner; Christian Levers; Marcus Lindner; Christoph Plutzar; Pieter Johannes Verkerk; Emma H. van der Zanden; Anette Reenberg
Environmental Science & Policy | 2015
Panos Panagos; Pasquale Borrelli; Katrin Meusburger; Emma H. van der Zanden; Jean Poesen; Christine Alewell
Land Use Policy | 2017
Emma H. van der Zanden; Peter H. Verburg; Catharina J.E. Schulp; Pieter Johannes Verkerk
Landscape and Urban Planning | 2016
Emma H. van der Zanden; Christian Levers; Peter H. Verburg; Tobias Kuemmerle
Land Degradation & Development | 2017
Harun M. Kiruki; Emma H. van der Zanden; Žiga Malek; Peter H. Verburg