Articles | Volume 9, issue 2
https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-9-441-2018
https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-9-441-2018
Research article
 | 
03 May 2018
Research article |  | 03 May 2018

A global assessment of gross and net land change dynamics for current conditions and future scenarios

Richard Fuchs, Reinhard Prestele, and Peter H. Verburg
Abstract

The consideration of gross land changes, meaning all area gains and losses within a pixel or administrative unit (e.g. country), plays an essential role in the estimation of total land changes. Gross land changes affect the magnitude of total land changes, which feeds back to the attribution of biogeochemical and biophysical processes related to climate change in Earth system models. Global empirical studies on gross land changes are currently lacking. Whilst the relevance of gross changes for global change has been indicated in the literature, it is not accounted for in future land change scenarios. In this study, we extract gross and net land change dynamics from large-scale and high-resolution (30–100 m) remote sensing products to create a new global gross and net change dataset. Subsequently, we developed an approach to integrate our empirically derived gross and net changes with the results of future simulation models by accounting for the gross and net change addressed by the land use model and the gross and net change that is below the resolution of modelling. Based on our empirical data, we found that gross land change within 0.5 grid cells was substantially larger than net changes in all parts of the world. As 0.5 grid cells are a standard resolution of Earth system models, this leads to an underestimation of the amount of change. This finding contradicts earlier studies, which assumed gross land changes to appear in shifting cultivation areas only. Applied in a future scenario, the consideration of gross land changes led to approximately 50 % more land changes globally compared to a net land change representation. Gross land changes were most important in heterogeneous land systems with multiple land uses (e.g. shifting cultivation, smallholder farming, and agro-forestry systems). Moreover, the importance of gross changes decreased over time due to further polarization and intensification of land use. Our results serve as an empirical database for land change dynamics that can be applied in Earth system models and integrated assessment models.

Dates
1 Introduction

Land change dynamics (e.g. changes in land cover or land use) play a major role in the Earth system. They have far-reaching consequences by altering many biophysical and biogeochemical ecosystem processes (e.g. albedo, greenhouse gas fluxes, transpiration, water balance, and surface roughness), which directly or indirectly drive the climate on the continental to global scale (Ciais et al., 2013; Gaillard et al., 2010; Houghton et al., 2012; Shevliakova et al., 2009; Teuling et al., 2017; Zaehle and Dalmonech, 2011). Earth system models (ESMs) are used to explore the impacts of land changes on future climate, biogeochemical cycling, and vegetation dynamics. Information on the extent and amount of land changes is usually provided by land use change models (LUCMs) or the land use modules of integrated assessment models (IAMs). Land change dynamics can be provided by LUCMs and IAMS either by a “net change approach”, i.e. area gains minus area losses per grid cell, or by a “gross change approach”, i.e. area gains plus area losses per grid cell. Not accounting for gross land changes has been shown to substantially underestimate the amount of land changes and related climate effects (Arneth et al., 2017; Bayer et al., 2017; Fuchs et al., 2015, 2016; Peng et al., 2016; Prestele et al., 2017). Thus, gross changes need to be considered in future model development.

The implementation of gross land changes, however, faces various difficulties. First, LUCMs and IAMs mostly have limited abilities to account for gross land changes at the scale of modelling. Most land use models only account for land changes in one direction. For instance, if the model has to allocate increasing area for a specific land cover type, it is often not able to model area losses of the same class at the same time. Second, land use models typically simulate land changes at a spatial resolution of 5 arcmin (ca. 10 km at the Equator) or coarser, but do not account for the area gains and losses happening within these grid cells. Thus, their spatial resolution is still too coarse to capture many land changes at the small scales on which they occur. Third, ESMs that implement land change data provided by IAMs and LUCMs typically run at a resolution of 0.25–2 and miss large amounts of land changes if they do not account for gross changes by aggregating from the LUCM–IAM grid to their native grid.

As part of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) many ESMs are potentially able to account for gross land changes (Arneth et al., 2017). However, empirically based gross land change data that can directly be implemented in assessment models are currently lacking on a global scale. This lack of data availability hampers a comprehensive integration of gross land change information in LUCMs and, since LUCMs often feed into ESMs and IAMs, also in ESMs and IAMs (Bayer et al., 2017; Prestele et al., 2017). Moreover, in recent years, the focus of assessing the impact of gross land changes on the climate was mainly based on the historical period (Bayer et al., 2017; Fuchs et al., 2015, 2016; Hurtt et al., 2006; Wilkenskjeld et al., 2014). The role of gross land changes in future land use projections remained unclear, mostly because of the unknown magnitude of present-day gross land changes, but also the lack of understanding of how gross land change dynamics would develop with time (Arneth et al., 2017; Hurtt et al., 2011; Stocker et al., 2014). This inhibits a precise appraisal of future mitigation and adaptation potentials (Arneth et al., 2017). Currently, the Land Use Harmonization data (LUH; Hurtt et al., 2011, and its updated CMIP6 version LUH2; G. C. Hurtt et al., personal communication, 2018) are the only global datasets accounting for gross land changes. However, in these datasets gross land changes are assumed to only occur in shifting cultivation areas of the tropics (Bayer et al., 2017). A global quantification of other bidirectional changes, like cropland expansion and abandonment or afforestation and deforestation within the grid cell sizes of ESMs or IAMS, is missing completely (Prestele et al., 2017).

Empirical data, such as from remote sensing or land cover statistics, that contain information on area gains and area losses can be used to inform LUCMs and IAMs about land changes below their native resolution (further on referred to as land changes on a “sub-pixel” scale). Such empirical data has recently become available at very high spatial resolutions (30–100 m) at the continental (Bossard et al., 2000; European Environment Agency (EEA), 2006; Meiyappan et al., 2016; MoEF, 2015; RCMRD, 2016; Roy et al., 2015; Vogelmann et al., 2001; Wickham et al., 2010, 2013) or even global scale (Jun et al., 2014).

The objective of this paper is to improve the current representation of gross land changes in LUCMs and IAMs by conducting an empirical analysis of gross land use changes and proposing an approach that implements empirically derived gross land changes in a global land use model. We account for both the gross land changes at the model scale (5 arcmin spatial resolution) and the gross land changes at the sub-pixel scale. Specifically, we (1) characterize global-scale relationships between gross and net change by analysing empirical data, (2) apply these findings to a future land use change simulation, and (3) demonstrate how the consideration of gross land changes, in contrast to net land changes, can lead to substantially different results with respect to land use composition, future land change dynamics, and consequences for global change studies, e.g. on the global carbon cycle. Moreover, we translate the total gross and net land change into metrics that ESMs are able to use at a common resolution of 0.5 and thus provide a new global dataset on future gross land changes.

https://www.earth-syst-dynam.net/9/441/2018/esd-9-441-2018-f01

Figure 1Spatial coverage of high-resolution land change datasets based on remote sensing that were used in this study to derive gross land change dynamics within 0.5 grid cells; National Land Cover Data (NLCD), Coordination of Information on the Environment (CORINE), Regional Centre for Mapping of Resources for Development (RCMRD), Ministry of Forestry Indonesia (MoFor).

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Table 1Overview of high-resolution land change datasets used in this study.

* Refers to available years of the datasets that were not used in this study.

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https://www.earth-syst-dynam.net/9/441/2018/esd-9-441-2018-f02

Figure 2Comparison of regional and continental remote sensing products (left) with global Globeland30 (right) for overlapping areas and roughly the same time spans, showing (a) CORINE land cover (2000–2012) for greater Berlin; (c) NLCD (2001–2011) for greater Washington; (e) Indian land cover (1995–2005) for greater Delhi; (g) RCMRD Tanzania (2000–2010) for Greater Dar es Salaam; (i) MOFOR (2000–2009) for greater Jakarta; (b), (d), (f), (h), (j) Globeland30 (2000–2010) depicting areas of their regional and continental counterparts. Note: cultivated land in Globeland30 comprises both cropland and pastures but is depicted in the figure with the same colour as croplands.

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2 Data and methods

2.1 Empirical data

In total, we used 13 independent empirical datasets based on remote sensing to assess land changes on the sub-pixel scale. The spatial coverage of all datasets used in this study is depicted in Fig. 1. The individual features, accuracies, and available years are shown in Table 1. Since our objective was to describe future land change dynamics, we first focused on datasets that cover the most recent years (from 2000 onwards). Some datasets contain data for years before 2000. They were preprocessed and analysed but not used in this study. Secondly, we selected datasets that had a minimum spatial resolution of 100 m in order to account for the fine-scale land changes. However, most of the datasets that we included had a 30 m resolution. Thirdly, we used available accuracy assessments of the datasets for individual years made by the individual institutions, only including those with reasonable quality (around 80 % or higher), a sufficient sampling scheme, and reference data. At the time of assessment, the accuracy assessments of land changes were found to be lacking for most of the datasets. Usually, if available, the accuracy of the change products is lower than that of the individual years (e.g. Wickham et al., 2010, 2013). If an accuracy assessment was not available, we checked visually for the quality by comparing with other datasets that were available for the same larger region (Fig. 2). The accuracy of Globeland30 for the year 2010 was higher than 80 % (Chen et al., 2014). However, for the year 2000, no accuracy assessment is available yet (official release was summer 2016, and an extended accuracy assessment is planned). Regional accuracy assessments of Globeland30 yielded lower accuracies, e.g. for Dar Es Salaam (Tanzania) and Kathmandu (Nepal) accuracies were 61 and 54 %, respectively (Fonte et al., 2017), while in Kenya it was found to be 56–64 % (See et al., 2017). Accuracies for Italy (Brovelli et al., 2015), Germany (Jokar Arsanjani et al., 2016a), and Iran (Jokar Arsanjani et al., 2016b) were greater than 78 % (See et al., 2017). Although a comprehensive accuracy assessment for both years is currently not available, we decided to use this dataset for both years because of its global coverage, the high spatial resolution, and reasonable quality of land cover and changes in areas of overlap with the other datasets used in our analysis (Fig. 1). This allowed us to describe land dynamics in areas that were not covered by other datasets.

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Figure 3Land system map for the baseline year 2000 used by the CLUMondo model.

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2.2 The CLUMondo model and the future scenario

To assess gross and net land changes for a future scenario, we used simulation output from the land system model CLUMondo (van Asselen and Verburg, 2012, 2013). This model uses a land system classification instead of the more traditional land cover classification (van Asselen and Verburg, 2012). Land systems are described by a set of fractional land cover classes consisting of built-up, cropland, grassland, forest, and other land co-occurring in spatial simulation units of 9.25×9.25km pixel. To account for regional differences, the fractional amounts of land cover per land system differ per world region. Further, land management activities, such as livestock and crop production as well as sequestered carbon, are used to describe each land system. These differ for each land system per world region. A land system map for the baseline year 2000, which is based on census and remote sensing data (van Asselen and Verburg, 2012), can be seen in Fig. 3. Land systems are allocated using local empirical relationships of land systems with explanatory biophysical and socioeconomic data, such as irrigation, population density, and market accessibility (van Asselen and Verburg, 2012, 2013). Land system changes are simulated based on a demand–supply approach.

The model allocates the land systems to fulfil the demand for goods described by a scenario. The model is able to simulate gross land changes inherently by expanding a land system at one place while contracting it at another place. Within the model algorithm, each location is assigned the land system with the highest competitive power at that place. For some land systems, conversion restrictions are applied, e.g. to prevent urban development from being converted back to agricultural use and to account for conversion costs. Allowing such co-occurring area gains and losses in the same land system within a world region the model accounts for gross change dynamics at the scale of modelling. However, gross changes at the sub-pixel scale are not taken into account.

In this study, we used a reference scenario for the period 2000–2040 to demonstrate the feasibility of our approach to include gross land change dynamics in a land use model. This reference scenario is driven by the demand for crop production, ruminant livestock production, and the provision of built-up areas (Eitelberg et al., 2016). The scenario is based on the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report World Agriculture Towards 2030–2050, the 2012 revision (Alexandratos and Bruinsma, 2012), and characterizes the development of crop and livestock systems from 2010–2050. Regional-level future demands for crop production and livestock are provided by the integrated assessment model IMAGE (Stehfest et al., 2014). Further details on the scenario can be found in Eitelberg et al. (2016).

2.3 Methods

2.3.1 General methods

To assess the gross or net land change dynamics at a spatial resolution relevant for ESMs and IAMs, we analysed all land changes (at the scale of modelling and sub-pixel scale) at the common spatial resolution of ESMs and IAMs (0.5). Specifically, we derived globally for every 0.5 grid cell an entire land change matrix containing all land cover conversion types. We did this for each year of the simulation period. From these land cover conversion types, the specific area gains, losses, and net and gross changes can be derived.

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Figure 4Detailed overview of the approach. The approach is divided into three major steps: preprocessing (top), processing (middle), and the post-processing of the results (bottom). The left panel explains the individual steps for the analysis at the scale of modelling using a land system model and a reference scenario for the period 2000–2040. The right panel shows the individual steps for the analysis at the sub-pixel scale using empirical data.

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2.3.2 Land changes at the scale of modelling

In order to assess gross and net land changes at the level of land cover types commonly used in Earth system models, the land systems had to be translated back into their land cover components (e.g. grassland, cropland, forest, etc.). For the sake of efficiency, we focused on areas where land systems have changed (Fig. 4, upper left box). Within each 0.5 grid cell, we converted the land system changes into fractional land cover changes and prepared a lookup table stating the land cover area gains and losses for each class (Fig. 4, middle left box). Based on the area gains and losses per class, we derived the net and gross area change. Subsequently, we applied the land change matrix from our empirical data analysis (see next section) to derive land conversion types, e.g. from forest to grassland or from grassland to cropland (Fig. 4, upper left box). By applying the empirically derived change matrix to the land system changes, we assume that the rates of gross change within a land system will not change in the future as long as the land system remains stable. Thus, we infer that gross changes in land cover are an inherent characteristic of the land system.

2.3.3 Land changes at the sub-pixel scale

We first reprojected all original empirical datasets into an equal area projection (WGS84 Eckert IV). Subsequently, we aggregated all class legends for each product into five IPCC land categories (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 2003): settlement, cropland (including orchards and agro-forestry), forest, grassland (pastures and natural grassland), and other land. In the Supplement S1 Sect. 1, we give an overview of how each legend was aggregated. The Globeland30 dataset had a class for “cultivated land” that in addition to cropland also contains managed pastures that could not be separated properly. In this study, we considered “cultivated land” as cropland.

We calculated one change dataset for every time step of each product with the original spatial resolution. For the CORINE product, we used the available change layers. For Indian land cover 1995 to 2005 and for some regions in the Globeland30, we recognized a shift by 1 pixel between the individual years when calculating land changes. This caused problems in generating the change layers. In the Supplement S1 Sect. 2, we explain in detail how we solved these problems.

We used a mask of each land system for the base year 2000 to clip our various change products by land system in order to retrieve land changes per land system. In parallel, we created a 0.5 grid cell layer and overlaid it with the clipped change products for each land system to create a land change matrix containing all change areas separately for each 0.5 grid cell.

The tabulation of change areas per land system within each 0.5 grid cell allowed us to calculate the gross  net ratio, the net change fraction, and the change matrix (Fig. 4, upper right box). The gross  net ratio explains the underestimation of changes by the net change approach compared to the gross change approach (see Fuchs et al., 2015). To derive the gross  net ratio, we first retrieved the net change area (area gains minus area losses) and the gross change area (area gains plus area losses), and then we divided our gross changes by the net changes and multiplied it by 100 to get the gross  net ratio in percent (Eq. 1).

(1) gross / net ratio = gross change net change × 100

The net change fraction refers to the net change in each class as a fraction of the total class area. The change matrix contains the absolute and relative areas of all land conversion types. In order to retrieve change parameters for each land system, we averaged the gross  net ratios and change matrices of each land system for each product and time step. For the net change fraction, we took the median of all 0.5 grid cells per land system. The individual parameters for each land cover product can be found in the Supplement S2.

From the various change products and time steps, we calculated spatially weighted averages for the change parameters to account for the different spatial coverages of each product. In the Supplement S1 Sect. 5, we provide an overview for each dataset and its fractional contribution per land system to the final weighted average. Further, we annualized every time step of the individual products to make datasets with different time spans comparable in their change dynamics (Fig. 4, upper right box). Time steps 1 year are the regular time intervals of many land use models, including the one used here.

Subsequently, we applied our derived change parameters (net change fraction, gross  net ratio, and change matrix) from the empirical study to the reference scenario (Sect. 2.2). This allowed us to account for sub-pixel processes in the future simulation scenario (Fig. 4, middle right box). A detailed example of this procedure is found in the Supplement S1 Sect. 3.

2.3.4 Post-processing

In the post-processing phase, we combined our results from the land changes derived at the scale of modelling (Sect. 2.3.2) and land changes derived on the sub-pixel scale (Sect. 2.3.3). We aggregated both datasets at 0.5 grid cell resolution (Fig. 4, bottom box) by adding the values of both data streams together. To achieve this, we rescaled land changes derived on the sub-pixel scale to 0.5 while keeping the sub-pixel information. One dataset was generated that contained net land changes and one that contained gross land changes. This way we could compare the differences between the two methods.

Table 2Empirical gross  net ratios in percent for each land system separated by land cover class components. A higher gross  net ratio indicates larger discrepancies between net and gross land change estimates (a gross  net ratio of 200 means that the gross changes are double the net land changes). Usually, larger discrepancies occur in heterogeneous land systems due to small-scale bidirectional changes within the same grid cell. Note: gross  net ratios were weighted averaged amongst all input data and temporarily normalized for 1-year time steps to ensure comparability.

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3 Results

3.1 Empirical gross land changes

In Table 2, we list all gross  net ratios that we retrieved from the empirical data for each land system separated by land cover class. All gross  net ratios are provided as spatially weighted averages of all empirical datasets contributing to these values. Overall, the gross  net ratio of the settlement land cover ranged from 113 to 143 % for the different land systems containing settlements, for cropland from 116 to 285 %, for forest from 125 to 226 %, for grassland from 123 to 212 %, and for other land from 121 to 165 %. Typically, cropland, forest, and grassland components have on average the highest gross  net ratios over all land systems (149, 149 %, and 162 %, respectively). These classes are mostly affected by bidirectional changes, meaning gains and losses occurring at the same time within a pixel of 0.5s. These changes are mostly caused by swaps of the abovementioned land cover classes due to cultivation practices, for example shifting cultivation (temporary cultivation of one plot after cultivation the plot is abandoned, which restores natural vegetation while a neighbouring plot is cultivated in the meanwhile). In contrast to these high gross  net ratios, settlement and other land have lower gross  net ratios (settlement 122 %, other land 136 %); i.e. these classes develop more one-directionally. Settlement changes are mainly characterized by urbanization. Other land is comprised primarily of inaccessible land areas (e.g. mountainous area, bare land, etc.) that rarely change and are therefore less prone to swaps with other land cover classes.

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Figure 5Gross  net ratios for mosaic land systems (all land systems that start with “mosaic” in their name) and homogeneous land systems (all other land systems) per land cover class and all together.

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If we separate the different land systems based on their land cover composition, it can be seen that on average homogeneous land systems have lower gross  net ratios than mosaic land systems (Fig. 5). Mosaic land systems are characterized by a large heterogeneity of land cover classes and the spatial distribution of land cover within these land systems (indicated by the term “mosaic” in the land system classification). Many of these land systems represent areas of smallholder farming with small parcels of land. Often these land systems have multiple land uses or perform rotational systems (e.g. shifting cultivation) that cause these higher gross  net ratios due to bidirectional changes. This is particularly the case for cropland and grassland, for which the difference in gross  net ratio is the largest compared to homogeneous agricultural systems (Fig. 5). In contrast, homogeneous classes comprise large parcels of land to minimize land management efforts and to increase land use intensity. These systems are typically more stable in terms of land changes, since production output will be achieved by intensification rather than expansion or rotation between land cover types. Therefore, the gross  net ratios of homogenous land system are lower than those of mosaic land systems.

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Figure 6Overall area gains (blue) and losses (red) per land cover class shown as change rate per year in percent for the period 2000–2040. Left figure panels (a, c, e, g) refer to gains and losses derived at the scale of modelling. Right panels (b, d, f, h) refer to combined changes at the scale of modelling and sub-pixel scale. (a, b) Gains and losses in forest area, (c, d) grassland, (e, f) cropland, and (g, h) other land. Note: settlement changes are not shown here due to small areas affected by changes.

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3.2 Gross changes projected by the model

To demonstrate our approach for deriving gross change in future scenarios, we used a reference scenario for the period 2000–2040 based on the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report World Agriculture Towards 2030–2050 (Alexandratos and Bruinsma, 2012; see Sect. 2.2. for details). In Fig. 6, we show the different area gains and losses based on this scenario for each land cover component over the entire modelling period (2000–2040). The left panels (Fig. 6a, c, e, and g) refer to gains and losses derived by land system changes (scale of modelling). The right panels (Fig. 6b, d, f, and h) refer to the combination of changes at both the scale of modelling and the sub-pixel scale.

Based solely on the simulated changes at the model scale (Fig. 6, left panels), the main areas of land use change were found on the east coast of the US, in Brazil and Argentina, the Sahel zone in Africa, large parts of Europe, and some regions of the Middle East, India, China, and South-east Asia. Except for eastern Europe, some parts of India, China, and Mexico, these changes led to widespread cropland area gains. On the east coast of the US, eastern Europe, India, Argentina, and South-east Asia, this came at the expense of forest. In Brazil, the Sahel zone, the Middle East, and northern China, cropland gains occurred at the cost of grassland and other land losses. However, large parts of the world remained unaltered in the modelled scenario (see the yellowish colours for each land cover class in the left panels of Fig. 6).

The combination of changes at the scale of modelling and sub-pixel scale changed the overall picture of area gain and loss (Fig. 6, right panels). Spatial patterns of changes appeared more diversified and subtle, depending on the occurrence and the empirical parameterization of land change dynamics of each individual land system type. For instance, forest changes (Fig. 6b) appeared more widespread. Large parts of Africa and South America outside of the tropical rainforest, the boreal region, China, and Australia were now subject to strong forest dynamics including reforestation

Likewise, areas of large forest losses on the east coast of the US and South-east Asia were amplified at the same time as some reforestation is happening in these regions. Similar results were found for all other land cover classes. Additionally, the magnitude of changed area per pixel increased considerably by adding sub-pixel processes. When combining changes at the scale of modelling and sub-pixel scale, the land system model and scenario implementation accounted for 20 % of all gross and net land changes, while the other 80 % of changes originated sub-pixel changes. For forest and grassland, this led to larger area gains, while for cropland and other land this led to a higher magnitude of area losses. Moreover, the overall trends of gains and losses for some land cover classes in some regions (for instance, grassland in the US) even reversed by adding sub-pixel processes (Fig. 6d) compared to the approach without including these (Fig. 6c).

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Figure 7Global patterns of combined land change rates (at the scale of modelling and sub-pixel scale) per year (in percent) for a reference scenario for the period 2000–2040. Panel (a) shows yearly change rates accounting for net land changes, panel (b) shows yearly change rates accounting for gross land changes, and panel (c) shows the difference in change rates between net and gross changes.

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Figure 8Major land cover classes that cause gross land changes. Land changes comprise land changes at the scale of modelling and sub-pixel changes depicted as RGB composite, with forest (red), grassland (green), and cropland (blue). Note: pink, turquoise, and yellow colours refer to changes between two of these three classes (pinkish indicates cropland and forest, turquoise indicates cropland and grassland, and yellowish indicates forest and grassland). Brighter colours refer to higher gross land changes, and darker colours refer to lower gross land changes.

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3.3 Regional differences in accounting for net and gross land changes

In Fig. 7, we added the absolute area gains and losses of all land cover classes together, comprising changes at the scale of modelling and sub-pixel scale. We depict the total net changes (Fig. 7a), total gross changes (Fig. 7b), and their difference (Fig. 7c) expressed as change rate per year and pixel in percent. Major change areas (net and gross) occurred in the eastern US, Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, the Sahel zone, the Atlas region in northern Africa, eastern and southern Europe, Turkey, central Asia, northern India, and China. The implementation of gross changes into the future scenario led to higher change rates. While net land changes had a global average of 0.92 % area change per year in this scenario, the consideration of gross land changes yielded 1.36 % per year. The difference in net and gross land changes occurred mostly in large farming regions because of the scenario conditions under which new agricultural areas were established (Fig. 7c). Hot spots with larger differences between net and gross land changes appeared in Mexico, Spain, eastern Europe, parts of the Sahel zone, central Asia, India, and China mostly due to the high rates of land cover change in these regions.

In Fig. 8, we illustrate the relative contribution of land cover classes to the gross change rates at the modelling scale and sub-pixel scale. The individual contributions of land cover classes varied quite strongly over the whole globe. Forest changes (reddish colours) contributed most to the changes in the boreal region. Grassland changes (greenish colours) occurred most dominantly in the western US, the Andes region, major parts of sub-Saharan Africa, central Asia, and Australia. Cropland and forest conversions (pinkish colours) can be seen on the east coast of the US, Europe, India, and South-east Asia. While at the east coast of the US and in South-east Asia the main change processes comprise cropland expansions at the cost of forests, the picture in eastern Europe and India is the opposite (see also Fig. 6). High gross land changes in cropland expansion at the expense of grasslands (turquoise colours) occurred mostly in heterogeneous agricultural areas like Mexico, the Sahel zone, the Mediterranean region, and northern China. These regions are known for their smallholder, mosaic land systems, which have in general a high gross change rate due to their regional land management practice and shifting cultivation. Additionally, due to the scenario forcing, many new cropland areas were established on former grassland areas. In the wider Amazon region in South America, in regions around the Congo, and in southern China, contributions to gross land changes came from all three land cover classes (darker brownish colours).

4 Discussion

4.1 Evaluation of methods and processing

In this paper, we presented a first estimate of global gross land change parameters to account for gross land changes in global assessments. Our work was largely based on empirical high-resolution data derived from remote sensing (30–100 m). The individual land change products covered in total roughly 260 million km2, which is an area approximately twice the entire land surface. The high spatial resolution allowed for the capture of land changes at the scales on which they occurred. This is a major advancement to previous studies. For example, within LUH (Hurtt et al., 2011) the transition matrices for different land types were not based on empirical data. Within LUH2 (G. C. Hurtt et al., personal communication, 2018) only shifting cultivation was constrained by Landsat imagery using the global forest change product of Hansen et al. (2013). In that respect, our database is able to provide much more nuanced change dynamics for all world regions and thematic classes. We applied the land dynamic parameters in a scenario model to demonstrate the potential of accounting for gross change in land change projections. This way, we provide the first comprehensive estimate of future gross change dynamics.

In the near future, many more datasets suitable for implementation in our approach from remote sensing can be expected, for example the new land cover change product on a yearly basis, recently released by the Land Cover Climate Change Initiative (LC-CCI; 1992–2015, 300 m spatial resolution; ESA-LC-CCI, 2017). New satellites for land cover change detection were launched (e.g. Sentinel 2A and 2B, 30 m spatial resolution; ESA, 2017), which will provide a good foundation to derive new land cover datasets in the coming years. Even existing Landsat and MODIS satellite archives are currently used to derive new land cover change datasets which can be implemented in our approach, for example the Terra Class datasets for the Brazilian Amazonas region (Almeida et al., 2016; Centro Regional da Amazônia, 2017).

In this study, we considered only data from the last 2 decades. However, additional land change data exist dating back to before the year 2000. For Africa, a few RCMRD datasets provided information for 1990 (RCMRD, 2016). The NLCD and CORINE data also provided land change data for the 1990s, although with lower accuracies (Vogelmann et al., 2001). The Indian land cover dataset has land change data available back to 1980 (Meiyappan et al., 2016). More regional land change datasets certainly exist. Landsat satellite archives provide data back to the 1970s (USGS, 2017). For some countries, for example the Netherlands, data back to 1900 exist, which in principle could allow us to retrieve gross land changes (Kramer and Dorland, 2009). These historic data would allow us to generate time-period-dependent gross  net change parameters for various world regions and implement them in existing global historic reconstructions for recent decades to explore regional land change dynamics (e.g. Ramankutty and Foley, 1999; Klein Goldewijk et al., 2016).

Applying existing and upcoming datasets will help to further extend our database and strengthen the reliability of the land change parameters. The use of multiple datasets for every world region would allow for more robust and region-specific estimates. For this study, we had to average our gross change parameters globally for each land system due to the limited amount of data for some regions. Averaging all empirical datasets for these land systems globally may lead to incorrect or inaccurate regional characterizations. Especially for grassland systems that occur over a very wide range of biomes (from tundra to the Sahel zone), such averaging is not correct. Therefore, we choose to use for these different grassland systems different averages for the Northern Hemisphere and the subtropical grassland systems (see the Supplement S1, Sect. 4). Nonetheless, an overestimation of this particular region, the tundra, may remain. This should be taken into account in applications using our data.

4.2 Evaluation of results and sources of uncertainty

Our empirical analysis has confirmed that gross land changes occur globally in every world region. Applied to our future reference scenario, net land changes led globally to an average of 0.92 % area change per year. Based on gross land changes the average change rate was 1.35 % per year, which is an increase of roughly 50 % compared to the net change approach. In earlier approaches that covered Europe only, a similar magnitude of difference between gross and net land changes could be proven outside shifting cultivation areas (Fuchs et al., 2015). Approximately 20 % of all gross and net land changes originated from the scenario implementation. The other 80 % of changes can be explained by sub-pixel changes identified from empirical data. This points to the significance of empirical data and sub-pixel processes. Over the entire modelling period, the gross  net ratio decreased for each land cover class by 1–4 %. This implies that gross land changes tend to play a decreasing role in later stages of the reference scenario. The main reason for this decrease was the conversion of heterogeneous mosaic land systems, which were characterized by high gross  net ratios, into more homogeneous land systems, which had lower gross  net ratios (compare Fig. 5). The increasing land use intensification led to a decreasing fraction of mosaic land systems in this scenario and therefore also to a decreasing impact of gross land changes.

In the simulated gross changes and in the sub-pixel gross changes, the main areas of change were related to regions with heterogeneous land systems, such as in shifting cultivation areas of Central America, the Sahel zone, and India. Mediterranean land systems (e.g. agro-forestry) and smallholder farming systems like in China or eastern sub-Saharan Africa also showed major changes.

Table 3Regrouping of our empirical data to five IPCC land categories for continental regions as an example of adaptation potential to new legends or focus areas. The table shows region-specific gross  net ratios. High gross  net ratios indicate higher gross land changes than net land changes for different regions and classes. These values may serve as proxies for ESMs and IAMs to account for gross land changes.

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The empirical data we used were subject to uncertainties as well. Occasionally it happened that the net change fraction was very small, resulting in very high gross  net ratios. When these small fractions of net change led to a gross  net ratio larger than 1000 %, we excluded these numbers from our analysis. Although we chose datasets of justifiable data quality (e.g. high spatial resolution, large area coverage), often with an accuracy assessment, each of these datasets suffered to varying degrees from some form of misclassification. Especially in land change datasets, misclassifications from individual years add up, decreasing the overall accuracy of the change dataset. This may affect the magnitude of gross changes in our scenario by increasing the gross  net ratio. In general, areas that are affected by seasonal snow cover, droughts, or temporal floods, such as wetlands and heterogeneous landscapes with multiple land cover components per pixel, are often subject to misclassifications due to many mixed pixels that may be classified differently in separate years without an actual change. Such misclassifications are likely to lead to overestimations of the gross changes between the years. Small positional inaccuracies between years are noted as change, while they do not represent change in reality. The global product, Globeland30, currently lacks a complete accuracy assessment and indeed major discrepancies with the regional and continental datasets can be seen, e.g. for Africa (see Fig. 2) where accuracies from regional case studies were also reported to be lower (Fonte et al., 2017; See et al., 2017). Nonetheless, despite greater challenges for a consistent land cover classification at a global level and its inherent complexity to compete with regional and continental datasets, global datasets are able to provide us with a more comprehensive picture over the entire globe by also providing information for areas that are currently underrepresented by regional and continental datasets, e.g. South America and central-eastern Asia.

4.3 Adaptation of change parameters to other legends

The approach presented in this paper used a specific future simulation model (CLUMondo) as an illustration. Other models using a different land cover class aggregation of the original classes may need to further aggregate our classes. For example, ESMs like the coupled LPJ (Smith et al., 2001) or ORCHIDEE (Ciais et al., 2005; Krinner et al., 2005) the IAMs like IMAGE (Stehfest et al., 2014) or MESSAGE-GLOBIOM (Havlík et al., 2014) are able to account for cropland, grasslands, and forests. Urban areas and other land are considered as well, but neutral in terms of fluxes. Additionally, all these models are able to work on at least 0.5 and are able to account for sub-pixel processes (Bayer et al., 2017; Peng et al., 2016).

We aggregated our data to five common Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) categories: settlement, cropland, forest, grassland, and other land (IPCC, 2003) in order to show the potential of our approach. For each continental region, we averaged the individual land cover components across all available land systems and calculated the same land change dynamic parameter as explained in the methods. In Table 3, we show the gross  net ratios for continental regions accompanied by the datasets that went into the regrouping. The averaged land transition matrices for these regions can be found in Table 4.

Similar to Fig. 6, in Figs. 7 and 8 we see the highest gross  net ratios between cropland and grassland in North and Central America and Africa due to shifting cultivation practices and smallholder farming systems. The highest gross  net ratios for forests could be found in North and Central America, South America, and central-eastern Asia due to forest management practices in these areas. Compared to the independent forest cover change dataset of Hansen et al. (2013), we see major hot spots of areas gains and losses appearing in these areas either next to each other or at the same spot. Other regions in Europe, Africa, and South-east Asia (except Indonesia) and Australia are less affected. The gross  net ratios of Table 3, together with the transition matrices of Table 4, can be applied to existing land use scenarios (historic or future) at 0.5 to account for gross land change dynamics.

Table 4Regrouping of our empirical data to five IPCC land categories for continental regions as an example of adaptation potential to new legends or focus areas. The table shows averaged land transition matrices for these continental regions (conversion matrix on the left, change matrix on the right). Note: T0 refers to time step 0 and T1 refers to time step 1, indicating the direction of change in time. These values may serve as proxies for ESMs and IAMs to account for gross land changes. Note: bold numbers refer to the totals per class for time step 0 and 1.

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4.4 Implications for Earth system modelling

Using our gross change data may have various implications for Earth system modelling, since the amount of changed area determines the dynamics and quantity of carbon fluxes, and the land conversion types determine to which carbon stocks the land changes have to be allocated (Bayer et al., 2017; Fuchs et al., 2016). The same applies to other biogeochemical and biophysical variables (e.g. methane, N2O, water vapour, albedo, surface roughness; Luyssaert, 2014; Peng et al., 2016; Schulze et al., 2010; Stocker et al., 2013; Teuling et al., 2017). Global patterns of greenhouse gas fluxes will alter depending on the gross land change dynamics within each world region. Erb et al. (2016) and Pongratz et al. (2018) mentioned the importance of land conversion types for Earth system modelling as one part to attribute land management. Our study contributes to this research effort by providing data-driven land conversion tables for different world regions and land systems. Previous studies for Europe showed that the consideration of gross land changes altered carbon fluxes at the pixel scale by up to 70 % (Fuchs et al., 2016). Overall, within a 60-year modelling period, the European carbon balance changed by ca. 7 % when accounting for gross changes (Fuchs et al., 2016).

5 Conclusions

In this study, we could show based on empirical data that gross land changes occur globally in every world region. This finding contradicts earlier studies, which assumed gross land changes to appear in shifting cultivation areas only. Applied to our future reference scenario, net land changes led globally to an average of 0.92 % area change per year, while for gross land changes the average change rate was 1.35 % per year. This is an increase of roughly 50 % compared to the net change approach. Empirical data contributed ca. 80 % of changes in the future scenario we used. This highlights the importance of accounting for sub-pixel processes in global assessments. In our scenario, gross land changes appeared in regional patterns that are most dominant in eastern Europe, Turkey, the Sahel zone, the US, and development countries in transition, like the BRICS states (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa). Large-scale and high-resolution remote sensing data were crucial for this kind of assessment. This highlights the increasing importance of land-related remote sensing data in global assessments. With our approach, it is possible to further decrease uncertainties in land change dynamics and related land atmosphere fluxes in ESMs. This again helps to improve accuracies for future mitigation and adaptation scenarios.

Data availability

All results are based on CLUMondo simulations (see Eitelberg et al., 2016). The CLU-Mondo source code and simulation results are available from https://www.environmentalgeography.nl/site/data-models/models/. Empirical data used for this study can be obtained from the individual institutions. Most data were available as open access. Indian LC had to be requested from the lead authors. MoFoR data were requested from MoFoR Indonesia. The aggregated information on the empirical data can be found in the Supplement.

Supplement

The supplement related to this article is available online at: https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-9-441-2018-supplement.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements

The work reported in this study was supported financially by the European Union Seventh Framework LUC4C project and ERC grant agreement no. 311819 – GLOLAND to VU University Amsterdam. We would like to thank Atul Jain, Prasanth Meiyappan, Wenbin Wu, Qiangyi Yu, Daniel Murdiyarso, and Ahmad Basyiruddin Usman for sharing their data, expertise, and support with us.

The article processing charges for this open-access
publication were covered by a Research
Centre of the Helmholtz Association.

Edited by: Somnath Baidya Roy
Reviewed by: two anonymous referees

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Short summary
We analysed current global land change dynamics based on high-resolution (30–100 m) remote sensing products. We integrated these empirical data into a future simulation model to assess global land change dynamics in the future (2000 to 2040). The consideration of empirically derived land change dynamics in future models led globally to ca. 50 % more land changes than currently assumed in state-of-the-art models. This impacts the results of other global change studies (e.g. climate change).
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