A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland

Grazing by domestic livestock is one of the primary ways by which humans have modified landscapes. At low stocking rates livestock grazing can modify vegetation community composition, but at high stocking rates grazing can also reduce vegetation productivity and initiate soil erosion, leading to lan...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thomson, Amanda Mary
Other Authors: Simpson, Ian A., School of Natural Sciences, Department of Environmental Science
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Stirling 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1893/23
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/23/1/Amanda_Thomson_PhD_Thesis.pdf
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spelling ftunivstirling:oai:dspace.stir.ac.uk:1893/23 2023-05-15T16:46:23+02:00 A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland Thomson, Amanda Mary Simpson, Ian A. School of Natural Sciences Department of Environmental Science 2003-03 10950533 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1893/23 http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/23/1/Amanda_Thomson_PhD_Thesis.pdf en eng University of Stirling http://hdl.handle.net/1893/23 http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/23/1/Amanda_Thomson_PhD_Thesis.pdf Farm management Agricultural systems Agricultural landscape management modelling vegetation degradation Iceland grazing Búmodel Vestur-Eyjafjallahreppur Hofstaðir Thesis or Dissertation Doctoral Doctor of Philosophy (PHD(R)) 2003 ftunivstirling 2022-06-13T18:45:21Z Grazing by domestic livestock is one of the primary ways by which humans have modified landscapes. At low stocking rates livestock grazing can modify vegetation community composition, but at high stocking rates grazing can also reduce vegetation productivity and initiate soil erosion, leading to land degradation. The country of Iceland has undergone severe land degradation over the past 1100 years, with over half of the former vegetation cover being lost, and the remainder having depleted productivity. This work focuses upon the role that grazing by domestic livestock played in this degradation, and how the interactions between farm management, vegetation cover and climate affected grazing patterns in space and time. The aims of the research were achieved by constructing an environmental simulation model, called Búmodel, which allowed a cross-disciplinary approach that integrated landscape ecology, environmental archaeology and historical analysis. Búmodel was loosely coupled with GIS so that spatially based model inputs and outputs could be displayed and analysed in map form. The purpose of Búmodel was to predict spatial and temporal patterns of vegetation biomass production and utilisation (through grazing and hay-making) with a view to commenting on vegetation degradation in the pre-modern period (pre-1900 AD). The model was parameterised using contemporary and historical Icelandic agricultural data. Model validation was undertaken using sensitivity tests and comparison with data from an independent grazing experiment in the north of Iceland. Búmodel was then applied to two contrasting study areas: Vestur- Eyjafjallahreppur, a farming community on the south coast of Iceland, and Hofstaðir, a farm estate in the north east of the country, situated inland by Lake Mývatn. These applications demonstrated the importance of farm management in avoiding land degradation and in ameliorating the impact of climate. They also established the usefulness of Búmodel as a tool for the investigation of human and environmental ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland Mývatn University of Stirling: Stirling Digital Research Repository Hofstaðir ENVELOPE(-21.917,-21.917,64.083,64.083) Mývatn ENVELOPE(-16.985,-16.985,65.600,65.600) Vestur-Eyjafjallahreppur ENVELOPE(-19.883,-19.883,63.633,63.633)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Stirling: Stirling Digital Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunivstirling
language English
topic Farm management
Agricultural systems
Agricultural landscape management
modelling
vegetation degradation
Iceland
grazing
Búmodel
Vestur-Eyjafjallahreppur
Hofstaðir
spellingShingle Farm management
Agricultural systems
Agricultural landscape management
modelling
vegetation degradation
Iceland
grazing
Búmodel
Vestur-Eyjafjallahreppur
Hofstaðir
Thomson, Amanda Mary
A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland
topic_facet Farm management
Agricultural systems
Agricultural landscape management
modelling
vegetation degradation
Iceland
grazing
Búmodel
Vestur-Eyjafjallahreppur
Hofstaðir
description Grazing by domestic livestock is one of the primary ways by which humans have modified landscapes. At low stocking rates livestock grazing can modify vegetation community composition, but at high stocking rates grazing can also reduce vegetation productivity and initiate soil erosion, leading to land degradation. The country of Iceland has undergone severe land degradation over the past 1100 years, with over half of the former vegetation cover being lost, and the remainder having depleted productivity. This work focuses upon the role that grazing by domestic livestock played in this degradation, and how the interactions between farm management, vegetation cover and climate affected grazing patterns in space and time. The aims of the research were achieved by constructing an environmental simulation model, called Búmodel, which allowed a cross-disciplinary approach that integrated landscape ecology, environmental archaeology and historical analysis. Búmodel was loosely coupled with GIS so that spatially based model inputs and outputs could be displayed and analysed in map form. The purpose of Búmodel was to predict spatial and temporal patterns of vegetation biomass production and utilisation (through grazing and hay-making) with a view to commenting on vegetation degradation in the pre-modern period (pre-1900 AD). The model was parameterised using contemporary and historical Icelandic agricultural data. Model validation was undertaken using sensitivity tests and comparison with data from an independent grazing experiment in the north of Iceland. Búmodel was then applied to two contrasting study areas: Vestur- Eyjafjallahreppur, a farming community on the south coast of Iceland, and Hofstaðir, a farm estate in the north east of the country, situated inland by Lake Mývatn. These applications demonstrated the importance of farm management in avoiding land degradation and in ameliorating the impact of climate. They also established the usefulness of Búmodel as a tool for the investigation of human and environmental ...
author2 Simpson, Ian A.
School of Natural Sciences
Department of Environmental Science
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Thomson, Amanda Mary
author_facet Thomson, Amanda Mary
author_sort Thomson, Amanda Mary
title A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland
title_short A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland
title_full A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland
title_fullStr A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland
title_full_unstemmed A modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern Iceland
title_sort modelling approach to farm management and vegetation degradation in pre-modern iceland
publisher University of Stirling
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/1893/23
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/23/1/Amanda_Thomson_PhD_Thesis.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-21.917,-21.917,64.083,64.083)
ENVELOPE(-16.985,-16.985,65.600,65.600)
ENVELOPE(-19.883,-19.883,63.633,63.633)
geographic Hofstaðir
Mývatn
Vestur-Eyjafjallahreppur
geographic_facet Hofstaðir
Mývatn
Vestur-Eyjafjallahreppur
genre Iceland
Mývatn
genre_facet Iceland
Mývatn
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1893/23
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/23/1/Amanda_Thomson_PhD_Thesis.pdf
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