2014
DOI: 10.1890/13-1245.1
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Spatially explicit modeling of 1992–2100 land cover and forest stand age for the conterminous United States

Abstract: Information on future land-use and land-cover (LULC) change is needed to analyze the impact of LULC change on ecological processes. The U.S. Geological Survey has produced spatially explicit, thematically detailed LULC projections for the conterminous United States. Four qualitative and quantitative scenarios of LULC change were developed, with characteristics consistent with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report on Emission Scenarios (SRES). The four quantified scenarios (A1B, A2… Show more

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Cited by 122 publications
(187 citation statements)
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“…The FORE-SCE LULC change model was used to distribute the demand for future regional LULC change on the landscape for each scenario (Sohl et al , 2014. Demand was allocated spatially according to probability of occurrence raster datasets (suitability surfaces).…”
Section: The Basin Characterization Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The FORE-SCE LULC change model was used to distribute the demand for future regional LULC change on the landscape for each scenario (Sohl et al , 2014. Demand was allocated spatially according to probability of occurrence raster datasets (suitability surfaces).…”
Section: The Basin Characterization Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the variety of socioeconomic factors that affect land use and their interplay with climate change, modeling the potential impacts of climate change on land use is complicated (Rindfuss et al 2008;Brown et al 2013). Ideally, a modeling framework would include feedbacks between climatological, economic, and policy driving forces from local to global scales (Sohl et al 2010;Rounsevell et al 2012;Meyfroidt et al 2013). However, current land-use modeling efforts suffer from 1) an incomplete representation of processes affecting land-use change, 2) an inability to represent the feedbacks between driving forces operating at multiple scales, and 3) a limited ability to assess modeling uncertainties.…”
Section: Land-use Projectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, econometric models have been widely used within the U.S. to project regional-scale land use based on concepts of optimizing economic return (Murray et al 2005;Lubowski et al 2006;Radeloff et al 2012), yet these too often neglect the impacts of climate change. Overall, it is impossible to perfectly represent all biophysical and socioeconomic processes that affect land-use change across all relevant spatial and temporal scales (Moreira et al 2009;Sohl et al 2010), and each of the modeling frameworks described here necessarily sacrifices the representation of some processes or geographic scale. The challenge for future applications is to include pertinent driving forces operating at multiple scales, while reducing model complexity to a reasonable level and maintaining the capability to quantify uncertainties (Sohl and Claggett 2013).…”
Section: Land-use Projectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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