4 results match your criteria: "Institute for Soil Science and Site Ecology[Affiliation]"
J Environ Manage
September 2013
Dresden University of Technology, Institute for Soil Science and Site Ecology, Pienner Strasse 19, Tharandt, Germany.
Regarding increasing pressures by global societal and climate change, the assessment of the impact of land use and land management practices on land degradation and the related decrease in sustainable provision of ecosystem services gains increasing interest. Existing approaches to assess agricultural practices focus on the assessment of single crops or statistical data because spatially explicit information on practically applied crop rotations is mostly not available. This provokes considerable uncertainties in crop production models as regional specifics have to be neglected or cannot be considered in an appropriate way.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Manage
December 2010
Institute for Soil Science and Site Ecology, Dresden University of Technology, Pienner Road 19, 01737 Tharandt, Germany.
The most important challenges faced in the field of integrated land-use management are (i) harmonizing and integrating different datasets, (ii) selecting appropriate indicators, (iii) fitting suitable models to adequate scales, and finally (iv) integrating data, indicators and models into systems that allow both a high level of participation and flexibility with the adaptation to a variety of questions and applications. The articles of this special issue "Squaring the Circle? Combining Models, Indicators, Experts and End-Users in Integrated Land-Use Management Support Tools" demonstrate the challenges that are related to this topic. The case studies present examples of such integrated systems in order to recommend best practices to support land-use management and to reveal existing shortcomings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Manage
December 2010
Institute for Soil Science and Site Ecology, Dresden University of Technology, Pienner Road 19, 01737 Tharandt, Germany.
The article presents the platform "Pimp your landscape" (PYL), which aims firstly at the support of planners by simulating alternative land-use scenarios and by an evaluation of benefits or risks for regionally important ecosystem services. Second, PYL supports an integration of information on environmental and landscape conditions into impact assessment. Third, PYL supports the integration of impacts of planning measures on ecosystem services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Manage
December 2010
Institute for Soil Science and Site Ecology, Dresden University of Technology, Pienner Road 19, 01737 Tharandt, Germany.
This article presents results of several studies in Middle, Eastern and Southeastern Europe on needs and application areas, desirable attributes and marketing potentials of forest management support tools. By comparing present and future application areas, a trend from sectoral planning towards landscape planning and integration of multiple stakeholder needs is emerging. In terms of conflicts, where management support tools might provide benefit, no clear tendencies were found, neither on local nor on regional level.
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