Land use in mountain areas
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Land use in mountain areas
The development of the mountain regions has always been and still is influenced by agriculture. This is a specialized type of agriculture whose methods strongly differ from those practiced in the flatlands. It has intensely shaped the present mountain landscape; but in this age of globalization, it is facing great problems and is being questioned more than ever before.
A whole row of the department's projects, therefore, are concerned with development tendencies in national and international agrarian policies and their effects on mountain agriculture. During the last several decades the use of favorable areas was intensified, while culture of difficult areas was extensified or even abandoned. What ecological consequences does this trend have? How does land use change effect the development of the landscape? How fast, for example, could forests win back land? How is species diversity effected? Could biotopes be lost? Could new ones develop?
To answer these questions we make use of different methods: field investigations, analysis of (historical) aerial photos, computer modeling. This makes it possible to identify influence factors which drive land use changes, and to identify instruments with which development can be actively influenced.
Projects under this focal point
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