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Land-use intensification and urbanisation processes are degrading ecosystem services in the Guapiaçu-Macacu watershed in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Paying farmers to forgo agricultural production activities in order to restore natural watershed services might be a viable means of securing water resources over the long term for the approximately 2.5 million urban water users in the region. This study quantified the costs of changing current land-use patterns to enhance watershed services. These costs are compared to estimates of the avoided water treatment costs for the public potable water supply as a proxy of willingness-to-pay for watershed services. Farm-household data was used to estimate the opportunity costs of abandoning current land uses in order to allow natural vegetation succession; a process that is very likely to improve water quality in terms of reducing erosion and subsequently water turbidity. Opportunity cost estimates were extrapolated to the watershed scale based on land-use classifications and a vulnerability analysis for identifying priority areas for watershed management interventions. Water quality and treatment cost data from the primary local water treatment plant (principal water user in the study area) were analysed to assess the potential demand for watershed services. The conversion of agricultural land uses for the benefit of watershed service provision was found to entail high opportunity costs in the study area, which is near the city of Rio de Janeiro. Alternative, relatively low-cost practices that support watershed conservation do exist for the livestock production systems. Other options include: implementing soil conservation techniques, permanent protection of areas that are vulnerable to erosion, protecting and restoring riparian and headwater areas, and applying more sustainable agricultural practices. These measures have the potential to directly reduce the amount of sediment and nutrients reaching water bodies and, in turn, decrease the costs of treatment required for providing the potable water supply. Based on treatment costs, the state water utility company’s willingness-to-pay for watershed services alone will not be sufficient to compensate farmers for forgoing agricultural production activities in order to improve the provision of additional watershed services. The results suggest that the opportunity costs of land-cover changes at the scale needed to improve water quality will likely exceed the cost of additional investments in water treatment. Monetary incentives conditioned on specific adjustments to existing production systems could offer a complementary role for improving watershed services. The willingness-to-pay analysis, however, only focused on chemical treatment costs and one of a potentially wide range of ecosystem services provided by the natural vegetation in the Guapiaçu-Macacu watershed (water quality maintenance for potable water provision). Other ecosystem services provided by forest cover include carbon sequestration and storage, moderation of extreme weather events, regulation of water flows, landscape aesthetics, and biodiversity protection. Factoring these additional ecosystem services into the willingness-to-pay equation is likely to change the conclusions of the assessment in favour of additional conservation action, either through payments for ecosystem services (PES) or other policy instruments. This effort contributes to the growing body of related scientific literature by offering additional knowledge on how to combine spatially explicit economic and environmental information to provide valuable insights into the feasibility of implementing PES schemes at the scale of entire watersheds. This is relevant to helping inform decision-making processes with respect to the economic scope of incentive-based watershed management in the context of the Guapiaçu-Macacu watershed. Furthermore, the findings of this research can serve long-term watershed conservation initiatives and public policy in other watersheds of the Atlantic Forest biome by facilitating the targeting of conservation incentives for a cost-effective watershed management.
Sequential Parameter Optimization is a model-based optimization methodology, which includes several techniques for handling uncertainty. Simple approaches such as sharp- ening and more sophisticated approaches such as optimal computing budget allocation are available. For many real world engineering problems, the objective function can be evaluated at different levels of fidelity. For instance, a CFD simulation might provide a very time consuming but accurate way to estimate the quality of a solution.The same solution could be evaluated based on simplified mathematical equations, leading to a cheaper but less accurate estimate. Combining these different levels of fidelity in a model-based optimization process is referred to as multi-fidelity optimization. This chapter describes uncertainty-handling techniques for meta-model based search heuristics in combination with multi-fidelity optimization. Co-Kriging is one power- ful method to correlate multiple sets of data from different levels of fidelity. For the first time, Sequential Parameter Optimization with co-Kriging is applied to noisy test functions. This study will introduce these techniques and discuss how they can be applied to real-world examples.
Computational intelligence methods have gained importance in several real-world domains such as process optimization, system identification, data mining, or statistical quality control. Tools are missing, which determine the applicability of computational intelligence methods in these application domains in an objective manner. Statistics provide methods for comparing algorithms on certain data sets. In the past, several test suites were presented and considered as state of the art. However, there are several drawbacks of these test suites, namely: (i) problem instances are somehow artificial and have no direct link to real-world settings; (ii) since there is a fixed number of test instances, algorithms can be fitted or tuned to this specific and very limited set of test functions; (iii) statistical tools for comparisons of several algorithms on several test problem instances are relatively complex and not easily to analyze. We propose amethodology to overcome these dificulties. It is based on standard ideas from statistics: analysis of variance and its extension to mixed models. This work combines essential ideas from two approaches: problem generation and statistical analysis of computer experiments.
We propose to apply typed Genetic Programming (GP) to the problem of finding surrogate-model ensembles for global optimization on compute-intensive target functions. In a model ensemble, base-models such as linear models, random forest models, or Kriging models, as well as pre- and post-processing methods, are combined. In theory, an optimal ensemble will join the strengths of its comprising base-models while avoiding their weaknesses, offering higher prediction accuracy and robustness. This study defines a grammar of model ensemble expressions and searches the set for optimal ensembles via GP. We performed an extensive experimental study based on 10 different objective functions and 2 sets of base-models. We arrive at promising results, as on unseen test data, our ensembles perform not significantly worse than the best base-model.
This volume addresses the topics of Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) and Climate Change Adaption (CCA) from the perspective of participants of the DAAD Alumni Summer School 2013. Contributions from 16 countries are gathered in this volume, thereby sharing specific knowledge on climate extremes, disasters, adaptation and prevention measures as well as current strategies in a range of different national contexts. The DAAD Alumni Summer School opened up a forum for integrative thinking and learning across cultures, disciplines and institutions. This volume is directly linked to the first volume of the series and presents a further outcome of the Summer School 2013. It invites the reader to look beyond common perspectives of DRR and CCA and relates climate change and natural disasters with interdisciplinary and bottom-up policy making. The outcomes presented in the two volumes are a starting point for further international & transdisciplinary knowledge exchange activities planned for the upcoming years.