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Library Climate Change Adaptation via U.S. Land Use Transitions: A Spatial Econometric Analysis

Climate Change Adaptation via U.S. Land Use Transitions: A Spatial Econometric Analysis

Climate Change Adaptation via U.S. Land Use Transitions: A Spatial Econometric Analysis

Resource information

Date of publication
декабря 2014
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
OSF_preprint:460E3-CA9-3F2

Climate change, coupled with biofuels development and other factors may well be changing US land usage patterns. We use a spatial econometric approach to estimate the drivers of US land use transitions in recent years. We consider transitions between six major land uses: agricultural land, forest, grassland, water, urban, and other uses. To examine drivers, we use a two-step linearized, spatial, multinomial logit model and estimate land use transition probabilities. Our results indicate that climate change is a driver of land use change and that movements to and from agricultural land and grassland exhibit opposite responses with climate change portending a movement out of cropland into grassland. These results indicate that adaptation to climate change through land usage change is ongoing but with spatial dependence.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Ximing Wu
Bruce A. Mccarl
Sung Ju Cho

Data Provider
Geographical focus