@article{92f3e502f3bb42938b13f9b7d7c8ba98,
title = "Agent-based modeling of hunting and subsistence agriculture on indigenous lands: Understanding interactions between social and ecological systems",
abstract = "Indigenous people of the Rupununi region of Amazonian Guyana interact with their natural environment through hunting and subsistence agriculture. To date the sustainability of indigenous livelihoods has been analyzed by modeling either hunting or forest clearing. Here we develop a holistic model framework with agent-based modeling to examine interactions between demographic growth, hunting, subsistence agriculture, land cover change, and animal population in the Rupununi. We use an extensive field dataset from social surveys, animal observation records and hunting kill locations along with satellite images. The model exhibits feedback loops between a growing human population and depletion of local natural resources. Our model can reproduce the population size of two different villages along with landscape patterns without further calibration. Our model can be used for understanding the conditions of sustainability for indigenous communities relying on subsistence agriculture and hunting, and for scenario analyses to examine the implications of external interventions.",
keywords = "Agent-based modeling, Amazon, Biodiversity, Human and natural systems, Indigenous people, Land use change, Socio-ecological systems",
author = "Takuya Iwamura and Lambin, {Eric F.} and Silvius, {Kirsten M.} and Luzar, {Jeffrey B.} and Fragoso, {Jos{\'e} M.V.}",
note = "Funding Information: The National Science Foundation (NSF; Grant BE/CNH 05 08094 ) provided funding, as did the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (GBMF) . We thank the Guyana Environmental Protection Agency, and the Ministry of Amerindian Affairs for authorizing the field study; the Iwokrama International Centre for Rainforest Conservation and Development, the North Rupununi District Development Board, The Bina Hill Institute and the South Central Peoples Development Association (SCPDA) for acting as in country partners and providing invaluable logistical support; the Makushi and Wapishana technicians whose hard work and dedication made the field research possible, and the leaders and members of all partner communities for their innumerable contributions to the project. We are deeply grateful to Kimberly Epps for her work on carbon estimates and we dedicate this paper to her memory. Fragoso thanks Peter Vitousek, Rodolfo Dirzo and Lisa Curran for their support. Iwamura thanks R. Dirzo for his support at Stanford, and Han Overman and Shirley Melville for their support in Guyana. We also thank L.F.B. de Oliveira, J.M. Read, J.P. Gibbs, A.R. Cummings, EL. Kurten, T. Levi and the graduate students, post docs, data transcribers, and volunteers who are not authors on this paper, but who contributed essential work and ideas. Author contributions: J.F, T.I., E.L and K.S. conceptualized this study; T.I. developed the model. J.F., J.L., K.S. designed the field study and oversaw data collection. T.I. drafted the manuscript with all authors participating in revisions. ",
year = "2014",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.envsoft.2014.03.008",
language = "אנגלית",
volume = "58",
pages = "109--127",
journal = "Environmental Modelling and Software",
issn = "1364-8152",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd.",
}