Managing ecosystem services for food security and the nutritional health of the rural poor at the forest-agricultural interface

Lead Research Organisation: Basque Centre for Climate Change
Department Name: Research

Abstract

[Proposal EE112/ K1396905]
Predicting the impacts of global change on rural communities is increasingly challenging due to the accelerating pace of climate change and social and economic development. The combined demands of ensuring food, energy and water security have been described as a "Perfect Storm" by Prof Sir John Beddington, HM Government's Chief Scientific adviser. It is clear that food security will continue to remain a critical issue in developing countries due to the unpredictable nature of food chains and the effects of climate change.

Food security in poor rural communities often relies significantly on flows of ecosystem services from 'natural' environments. For millennia mankind has engaged in thinking and learning experiences which have shaped the processes underpinning the production of food and the management of land, addressing multiple factors and tradeoffs. However, many food production systems require intensive management and are prone to failure outside of the range of their optimal environmental conditions. Concerns are growing about the ability of current agricultural systems to support rising human populations without further degrading critical ecosystem services (such as water provisioning, pollination). During extreme events, such as drought, or other shocks or crises (environmental, social or economic), the dependence of rural communities on ecosystem services to meet their nutritional and livelihood needs often increases. This highlights the importance of minimising the impacts of agricultural systems on ecosystems and the services they provide. Strategies for coping with food insecurity may, in turn, have an impact on the capacity of ecosystems to deliver ecosystem services as the spatial and temporal nature of feedbacks between socio-economic and ecological systems can be complex.

Addressing the sustainability of natural resource management and rural livelihoods requires integrated thinking across disciplines. The complex transformations which can, or have already occurred from natural forest to managed landscapes must be fully understood so that systems can be adopted which promote sustainable transformations and/or can mitigate any negative impacts. This proposal therefore brings together expertise in social sciences, economics, ecology, risk management, spatial planning, climate change and complexity sciences to design and integrate a suite of models and methods to analyse how dynamic stocks and flows of ecosystem services translate to local-level food security and nutritional health. The study will examine the multiple (and multi-directional) links between ecosystem services, food security and maternal and child health outcomes in poor rural communities, addressing three main themes:
1. Drivers, pressures and linkages between food security, nutritional health and ecosystem services;
2. Crises and tipping points: Past, present and future interactions between food insecurity and ecosystem services at the forest-agricultural interface;
3. The science-policy interface: How can we manage ecosystem services to reduce food insecurity and increase nutritional health?

Analysis of household and intra-household nutritional status and assessment and mapping of ecosystem services at the relevant spatial scales will be conducted in sites in Colombia and Malawi, which are characterised by mosaics of forests and agricultural lands, to explore the trade-offs and tipping points associated with managing these dynamic landscapes under climate and socio-economic change. Powerful new models will predict how ecosystem services will be changed by drivers and pressures for human wellbeing and food security. This will allow risk management/mitigation models and strategies to be developed which can inform national and regional policy in order to maintain ecosystems and support human wellbeing.

Planned Impact

The developmental impact of this project will be to contribute to poverty alleviation for the 550 million people living at the forest-agriculture interface (FAI) in the tropics through improved food security and nutritional health and more sustainable management of ecosystem services. Primary beneficiaries will be the almost 2 million people living at the FAI in the project's Malawi and Colombia case study sites, particularly underprivileged or marginalised social groups including women and children, poorer households and disadvantaged ethnic groups. Secondary beneficiaries include local leaders who manage natural resources and national policy-makers concerned with achieving food security without degrading ecosystems. A final group of beneficiaries includes academics and researchers working in cognate fields. Since the publication of the MEA in 2005, many scientists are taking an ecosystem service approach to complex land management challenges, and the major conceptual and methodological advances that will arise from this work will influence this important and topical research and policy area.

The project will provide an improved evidence base on the value of ecosystem services for food security and health, leading to the development of better policies and practices to manage ecosystem services and food security, in turn leading to healthier, more food secure indigenous people who are better able to contribute to economic activity, thus reducing poverty. The project is structured to ensure identification of the most appropriate pathways to impact and to facilitate monitoring. It begins with a baseline assessment of the current linkages between food security, nutritional health and ecosystem services, and the drivers and pressures determining these linkages. The project's second theme focuses on understanding past, present and future crises and tipping points and the trade-offs (and associated constraints) involved in coping with them, identifying key areas and opportunities for engagement. The third theme deals with the science-policy interface, supporting decision-making at different levels through scenario-building that explicitly outlines the food security and nutritional health outcomes of different decisions relating to ecosystem services management.

Primary beneficiaries in the case study sites will be engaged through village development or environment committees. A participatory approach will ensure that local research concerns are addressed by the project, and feedback is provided in appropriate formats to different groups (posters, leaflets, meetings - all in local language). Community radio will help target primary beneficiaries at national and regional scale.

Ownership at national policy level in Malawi and Colombia will be ensured by annual meetings with a national advisory group comprising government, NGO, leading academics and private sector representatives. Scenario-building workshops using the ARIES ecosystem service mapping and Bowtie risk management models developed by the project will enable national decision-makers to visualise impacts of policy options with potential impacts on food security (e.g. PES schemes, adaptation strategies). Uptake will be assured through the strong existing relationships between our national teams and local Ministries of Environment, Agriculture and Planning and supported by dissemination of information through policy briefings and news media.

At international level, uptake of the project's findings will be promoted through the global networks of CIAT, Worldfish and CI. CIAT and Worldfish are both part of the global CGIAR network while CI has over 30 offices worldwide engaged in policy discussions related to ecosystem services, climate change and conservation and with close relationships with relevant ministries. Within Africa, engagement of policy-makers will further be assured through the network of LEAD fellows and their activities.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Interrelations between nature and human intervention are made understandable and visiable through simplified computer interfaces.
Exploitation Route Simplified Ecosystem modeling can (and should) be very relvant and helpful for policy and deciscion makers around the globe.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice

URL http://aries.integratedmodelling.org/?page_id=77
 
Description A much improved version of the Thinklab modelling software (currently working with version 0.9.6). It supports a more powerful modelling functionality and has a more user friendly user interface. The ontologies are more exhaustive and the base distribution includes hydrological modelling, flood modelling and weather generation for scenario assessment. It is possible to run the current version of the software on other platforms in addition to Windows, i.e. Linux and MacOS
First Year Of Impact 2017
Sector Environment
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Description Data servers for ASSETS
Amount £26 (GBP)
Organisation Basque Government 
Sector Public
Country Spain
Start 07/2013 
End 04/2016
 
Description Data servers for ASSETS
Amount £26 (GBP)
Organisation Basque Government 
Sector Public
Country Spain
Start 07/2013 
End 04/2016
 
Title ARIES - ARtificial Intelligence for Ecosystem Services 
Description A web-accessible intelligent infrastructure to enable ecosystem services modeling on a larger scale and more adaptive approach than done before. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2014 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact See the ARIES web site (below) for a sample of case studies, publications and applications. 
URL http://aries.integratedmodelling.org
 
Title k.LAB semantic modelling platform 
Description Software infrastructure to enable cross-disciplinary, safe sharing of data and model artifacts and building of computational workflows to model concepts indicated by non-technical users. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2017 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact The ARIES project (http://aries.integratedmodelling.org) is one of the most well known results. 
URL http://www.integratedmodelling.org
 
Description Integrated Modelling Partnership 
Organisation Bangor University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I created the partnership with team members (including those from ESPA projects) to bring together institutions contributing to designing and building a fully integrated information landscape for the science of the future. The partnership develops and maintains the the k.LAB software stack that was employed and further developed in both my ESPA projects. It provides training in semantic modelling and supports partners and users in creating unprecedented model-data integration.
Collaborator Contribution The innovation and approach promoted and supported by the partnership were developed along with all partners as co-designers, promoters and testers.
Impact The k.LAB open-source software platform; The k.IM semantic annotation and modeling language; the IM worldview (ontologies) to describe data and model artifacts in an interoperable way. The collaboration is by nature multidisciplinary, being intended to enable dialogue between all disciplines through formal semantics, and there is no specific discipline it is targeted to, although the dialogue so far has involved the realm of sustainability - i.e., natural, social, economic, and climate sciences - more than others such as physics or astronomy.
Start Year 2018
 
Description Integrated Modelling Partnership 
Organisation US Geological Survey
Country United States 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution I created the partnership with team members (including those from ESPA projects) to bring together institutions contributing to designing and building a fully integrated information landscape for the science of the future. The partnership develops and maintains the the k.LAB software stack that was employed and further developed in both my ESPA projects. It provides training in semantic modelling and supports partners and users in creating unprecedented model-data integration.
Collaborator Contribution The innovation and approach promoted and supported by the partnership were developed along with all partners as co-designers, promoters and testers.
Impact The k.LAB open-source software platform; The k.IM semantic annotation and modeling language; the IM worldview (ontologies) to describe data and model artifacts in an interoperable way. The collaboration is by nature multidisciplinary, being intended to enable dialogue between all disciplines through formal semantics, and there is no specific discipline it is targeted to, although the dialogue so far has involved the realm of sustainability - i.e., natural, social, economic, and climate sciences - more than others such as physics or astronomy.
Start Year 2018
 
Description Integrated Modelling Partnership 
Organisation University of Vermont
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I created the partnership with team members (including those from ESPA projects) to bring together institutions contributing to designing and building a fully integrated information landscape for the science of the future. The partnership develops and maintains the the k.LAB software stack that was employed and further developed in both my ESPA projects. It provides training in semantic modelling and supports partners and users in creating unprecedented model-data integration.
Collaborator Contribution The innovation and approach promoted and supported by the partnership were developed along with all partners as co-designers, promoters and testers.
Impact The k.LAB open-source software platform; The k.IM semantic annotation and modeling language; the IM worldview (ontologies) to describe data and model artifacts in an interoperable way. The collaboration is by nature multidisciplinary, being intended to enable dialogue between all disciplines through formal semantics, and there is no specific discipline it is targeted to, although the dialogue so far has involved the realm of sustainability - i.e., natural, social, economic, and climate sciences - more than others such as physics or astronomy.
Start Year 2018
 
Title Thinklab semantic modeling platform 
Description Modeling platform for semantic description, storage and integration of data and models into distributed model workflows. 
Type Of Technology Software 
Year Produced 2014 
Open Source License? Yes  
Impact All the process and agent models for the ASSETS project will run on the platform, which also enables the ARIES project and others, and is taught to modelers worldwide in the Spring University held yearly in Bilbao. 
URL http://www.integratedmodelling.org
 
Title k.LAB & ARIES 
Description ARIES is powered by cutting-edge integrated modeling technology. The technology and corresponding k.LAB software are not specific to ecosystem services (i.e., they can be applied to other integrated modeling problems) and will be documented for developers and users at our future sister site dedicated to general integrated modeling. The innovations introduced with k.LAB are fully operational, and we have been teaching their principles and use at ARIES training events since 2013. 
Type Of Technology Physical Model/Kit 
Year Produced 2015 
Impact Decision maker soon will be able to connect to modeling engines through the k.EXPLORER, an interface that enables a two-step modeling workflow (set a context and observe a concept). With minimal training, running many sophisticated models will become a simple matter of searching and observing a concept over a context - a user workflow that closely resembles the familiar ways we use the Internet today. 
URL http://aries.integratedmodelling.org/?page_id=77
 
Description Ecosystem Service Partnership in South Africa in 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact "Modelling trade-offs among ecosystem services in agricultural production systems" at the Ecosystem Service Partnership (presented by Willcock on behalf of Balbi et al) in South Africa in 2015
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.espconference.org/espconference2015#.Vt1PtBjxKlN
 
Description ISU 2014 preparation 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact In preparation for the 2nd edition of the course "International Spring University for Ecosystem Services Modelling", Ferdinando Villa is running a series of webinars for the training team who will provide support during the course

As the Thinklab modelling software is in continuous development, the content of ISU-2014 is changing on a regular basis. The webinars are carried out to make sure all the training staff are fully aware of the material before the course. The course will se
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
 
Description International Spring University on Ecosystem Services Modelling 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact First world-wide training event in the ARIES methodology, offered to 30 participants including a focus group on food security and ecosystem services.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013,2014,2015
 
Description Training Caravan: Getting into Science 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact The Basque Government with the aim of fostering interest in Science invites researchers to visit and present their work at local schools and answer questions from the pupils.

The audience are 15-17 year-old students from local schools. The discourse is followed up with a description of Ecosystem Services, their importance, and the influence they have particularly in rural communities in different parts of the world. The final
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
 
Description Translation Community Posters Material from Colombia 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact A compilation of the content of all the community posters material that was produced from the PRA fieldwork. The material is a translation of all the posters into English to make it more accessible to all the project members

Colombia PRA field team finished dissemination of the posters to all of the 11 communities on October 30th. These posters are all written in Spanish. This report translates all the material to English and making it more widely available to other members o
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013