Arid
DOI10.3390/su8101019
Modeling Acequia Irrigation Systems Using System Dynamics: Model Development, Evaluation, and Sensitivity Analyses to Investigate Effects of Socio-Economic and Biophysical Feedbacks
Turner, Benjamin L.1; Tidwell, Vincent2; Fernald, Alexander3; Rivera, Jose A.4; Rodriguez, Sylvia5; Guldan, Steven6; Ochoa, Carlos7; Hurd, Brian3; Boykin, Kenneth3; Cibils, Andres3
通讯作者Turner, Benjamin L.
来源期刊SUSTAINABILITY
ISSN2071-1050
出版年2016
卷号8期号:10
英文摘要

Agriculture-based irrigation communities of northern New Mexico have survived for centuries despite the arid environment in which they reside. These irrigation communities are threatened by regional population growth, urbanization, a changing demographic profile, economic development, climate change, and other factors. Within this context, we investigated the extent to which community resource management practices centering on shared resources (e.g., water for agricultural in the floodplains and grazing resources in the uplands) and mutualism (i.e., shared responsibility of local residents to maintaining traditional irrigation policies and upholding cultural and spiritual observances) embedded within the community structure influence acequia function. We used a system dynamics modeling approach as an interdisciplinary platform to integrate these systems, specifically the relationship between community structure and resource management. In this paper we describe the background and context of acequia communities in northern New Mexico and the challenges they face. We formulate a Dynamic Hypothesis capturing the endogenous feedbacks driving acequia community vitality. Development of the model centered on major stock-and-flow components, including linkages for hydrology, ecology, community, and economics. Calibration metrics were used for model evaluation, including statistical correlation of observed and predicted values and Theil inequality statistics. Results indicated that the model reproduced trends exhibited by the observed system. Sensitivity analyses of socio-cultural processes identified absentee decisions, cumulative income effect on time in agriculture, and land use preference due to time allocation, community demographic effect, effect of employment on participation, and farm size effect as key determinants of system behavior and response. Sensitivity analyses of biophysical parameters revealed that several key parameters (e.g., acres per animal unit or percentage of normal acequia ditch seepage) which created less variable system responses but which utilized similar pathways to that of the socio-cultural processes (e.g., socio-cultural or physical parameter change ! agricultural profit ! time in spent in agriculture ! effect on socio-cultural or physical processes). These processes also linked through acequia mutualism to create the greatest variability in system outputs compared to the remainder of tests. Results also point to the important role of community mutualism in sustaining linkages between natural and human systems that increase resilience to stressors. Future work will explore scenario development and testing, integration with upland and downstream models, and comparative analyses between acequia communities with distinct social and landscape characteristics.


英文关键词acequia irrigation community sustainability system dynamics coupled natural-human systems connected hydrologic-human systems dynamic hypothesis leverage points model development sensitivity analysis
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E ; SSCI
WOS记录号WOS:000389314600059
WOS关键词WATER-GROUNDWATER INTERACTIONS ; RIVER-BASIN ; SIMULATION ; ENVIRONMENT ; VALIDATION ; MANAGEMENT
WOS类目Green & Sustainable Science & Technology ; Environmental Sciences ; Environmental Studies
WOS研究方向Science & Technology - Other Topics ; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
来源机构New Mexico State University
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/196589
作者单位1.Texas A&M Univ Kingsville, Dick & Mary Lewis Coll Agr Nat Resources & Human, 700 Univ Blvd,MSC 228, Kingsville, TX 78363 USA;
2.Sandia Natl Labs, POB 5800, Albuquerque, NM 87185 USA;
3.New Mexico State Univ, Coll Agr Consumer & Environm Sci, POB 30003,MSC 3-1, Las Cruces, NM 88003 USA;
4.Ctr Reg Studies, MSC05 3020,1 Univ New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA;
5.Dept Anthropol, MSC01-1040,1 Univ New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA;
6.New Mexico State Univ, Sustainable Agr Sci Ctr Alcalde, 371 Cty Rd 40,POB 159, Alcalde, NM 87511 USA;
7.Oregon State Univ, Dept Anim & Rangeland Sci, 124 Withycombe Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Turner, Benjamin L.,Tidwell, Vincent,Fernald, Alexander,et al. Modeling Acequia Irrigation Systems Using System Dynamics: Model Development, Evaluation, and Sensitivity Analyses to Investigate Effects of Socio-Economic and Biophysical Feedbacks[J]. New Mexico State University,2016,8(10).
APA Turner, Benjamin L..,Tidwell, Vincent.,Fernald, Alexander.,Rivera, Jose A..,Rodriguez, Sylvia.,...&Cibils, Andres.(2016).Modeling Acequia Irrigation Systems Using System Dynamics: Model Development, Evaluation, and Sensitivity Analyses to Investigate Effects of Socio-Economic and Biophysical Feedbacks.SUSTAINABILITY,8(10).
MLA Turner, Benjamin L.,et al."Modeling Acequia Irrigation Systems Using System Dynamics: Model Development, Evaluation, and Sensitivity Analyses to Investigate Effects of Socio-Economic and Biophysical Feedbacks".SUSTAINABILITY 8.10(2016).
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