scholarly journals Geodiversity Assessment with Crowdsourced Data and Spatial Multicriteria Analysis

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 716
Author(s):  
Piotr Jankowski ◽  
Alicja Najwer ◽  
Zbigniew Zwoliński ◽  
Jacek Niesterowicz

This paper presents an approach to geodiversity assessment based on spatial multicriteria analysis. Instead of relying solely on weighted linear combination (WLC) for aggregating factor ratings and weights to compute a synthetic measure of geodiversity, the approach employs WLC in concert with its local version called L-WLC to provide a more comprehensive assessment approach. As part of the approach, the assessment input data comprised of geodiversity factor ratings and weights were obtained through crowdsourcing. A geoinformation crowdsourcing tool called the geo-questionnaire was used to obtain data from 57 Earth science researchers worldwide. These data served as the bases for a group assessment of geodiversity. The reliability of assessment was evaluated by means of spatially explicit uncertainty analysis. The results showed the efficacy of local spatial multicriteria analysis techniques (L-WLC) used in concert with a global technique (WLC) on the example of geodiversity assessment for Karkonosze National Park in southwestern Poland.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicja Najwer ◽  
Piotr Jankowski ◽  
Zbigniew Zwoliński ◽  
Jacek Niesterowicz

<p>The main objective of virtual PICO is to present an approach to geodiversity assessment based on spatial multicriteria analysis (MCE) with Crowdsourced Data. Geodiversity assessment usually involves an individual expert or a group of experts who assess the value of geodiversity factors to the overall geodiversity score for a study area. The biggest objection to methods used so far is subjectivism. Responding to these objections, a crowdsourcing approach that uses an online geo-questionnaire linked with an interactive map was used.</p><p>The assessment input data comprised of seven environmental factor ratings and weights were obtained from 57 Earth science researchers worldwide. These data served as the bases for a joint  assessment of geodiversity. To provide more comprehensive assessment approach for aggregating factor ratings and weights to compute an overall measure of geodiversity the weighted linear combination (WLC) method and its local version L-WLC were used. Karkonosze National Park (KNP) located in south-western Poland in the border area between Poland and the Czech Republic was chosen as a research area. Karkonosze is the highest mountain range of the Sudetes, characterised by unique geological and geomorphological values. The geodiversity of the research area was valued with regards to the reliability of assessment evaluated by means of spatially explicit uncertainty analysis. Average (AVG) and standard deviation (STD) geodiversity maps (on the basis of 57 respondent data) were computed. As a result of their cross-tabulation, a bivariate maps with average geodiversity values (AVG: low, high) and standard deviation values (STD: low, high) were created. Two such maps, one for WLC results and another for L-WLC results, were compiled and evaluated, providing a more holistic visages of final geodiversity and its uncertainty. Given that L-WLC provides a realistic assessment of geodiversity and guided by its results, the areas of  high geodiversity and low uncertainty have been identified within Karkonosze range.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiros Tsegay Deribew

AbstractThe main grassland plain of Nech Sar National Park (NSNP) is a federally managed protected area in Ethiopia designated to protect endemic and endangered species. However, like other national parks in Ethiopia, the park has experienced significant land cover change over the past few decades. Indeed, the livelihoods of local populations in such developing countries are entirely dependent upon natural resources and, as a result, both direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures have been placed on natural parks. While previous research has looked at land cover change in the region, these studies have not been spatially explicit and, as a result, knowledge gaps in identifying systematic transitions continue to exist. This study seeks to quantify the spatial extent and land cover change trends in NSNP, identify the strong signal transitions, and identify and quantify the location of determinants of change. To this end, the author classifies panchromatic aerial photographs in 1986, multispectral SPOT imagery in 2005, and Sentinel imagery in 2019. The spatial extent and trends of land cover change analysis between these time periods were conducted. The strong signal transitions were systematically identified and quantified. Then, the basic driving forces of the change were identified. The locations of these transitions were also identified and quantified using the spatially explicit statistical model. The analysis revealed that over the past three decades (1986–2019), nearly 52% of the study area experienced clear landscape change, out of which the net change and swap change attributed to 39% and 13%, respectively. The conversion of woody vegetation to grassland (~ 5%), subsequently grassland-to-open-overgrazed land (28.26%), and restoration of woody vegetation (0.76%) and grassland (0.72%) from riverine forest and open-overgrazed land, respectively, were found to be the fully systematic transitions whereas the rest transitions were recorded either partly systematic or random transitions. The location of these most systematic land cover transitions identified through the spatially explicit statistical modeling showed drivers due to biophysical conditions, accessibility, and urban/market expansions, coupled with successive government policies for biodiversity management, geo-politics, demographic, and socioeconomic factors. These findings provide important insights into biodiversity loss, land degradation, and ecosystem disruption. Therefore, the model for predicted probability generally suggests a 0.75 km and 0.72 km buffers which are likely to protect forest and grassland from conversion to grassland and open-overgrazed land, respectively.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca K. Borchering ◽  
Steve E. Bellan ◽  
Jason M. Flynn ◽  
Juliet R.C. Pulliam ◽  
Scott A. McKinley

AbstractSubmitted Manuscript 2016. Territorial animals share a variety of common resources, which can be a major driver of conspecific encounter rates. We examine how changes in resource availability influence the rate of encounters among individuals in a consumer population by implementing a spatially explicit model for resource visitation behavior by consumers. Using data from 2009 and 2010 in Etosha National Park, we verify our model's prediction that there is a saturation effect in the expected number of jackals that visit a given carcass site as carcasses become abundant. However, this does not directly imply that the overall resource-driven encounter rate among jackals decreases. This is because the increase in available carcasses is accompanied by an increase in the number of jackals that detect and potentially visit carcasses. Using simulations and mathematical analysis of our consumer-resource interaction model, we characterize key features of the relationship between resource-driven encounter rate and model parameters. These results are used to investigate a standing hypothesis that the outbreak of a fatal disease among zebras can potentially lead to an outbreak of an entirely different disease in the jackal population, a process we refer to as indirect induction of disease.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahdi O. Karkush ◽  
Mahmoud S. Abdul Kareem ◽  
Sivakumar Babu

Abstract This study aims to use the concept of sustainability and provide guidance to geotechnical engineers to contribute towards greater sustainability in geotechnical design and construction. The methodology of the sustainability framework aims to support indicators and tools used in the sustainability concept in geotechnical engineering. In addition, available indicators will be used to analyze the role of natural resources, social impacts, environmental and economic aspects. In order to demonstrate the sustainability assessment approach, a case study is evaluated using the methodology of sustainability framework by using Multi-Criteria Analysis (MCA). The assessment is studied for raft footing and deep foundations (driven and bored piles A foundation treatment of 15×15 m and 0.45 m thickness to carry a high static load or to carry cyclic loading is analyzed. The results indicate the calculations of sustainability indices from the multicriteria analysis show that the option of raft footing than deep foundation if raft provides adequate allowable load by improving the soil using lime piles technique is sustainable.


2014 ◽  
Vol 905 ◽  
pp. 706-710 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rudy Aryanto ◽  
Trisnasari ◽  
Haryadi Sarjono ◽  
Idris Gautama So

This study purpose was to investigate the customer interface combination preferences of tourist toward ecotourism destination website of Mt. Gede Pangrango National Park. Primary data resources obtained through the spread a questionnaire to youth tourists who several times visit this tourism destination and often observe its website. Data analysis techniques used is conjoint analysis. The results of this study show the customer interface attributes combination of preference base on 7 C framework are 1) Context of navigation, primary color, speed and layout. 2) Content attributes i.e. information, services, font, and picture. 3) Communication attribute are news letter, broadcast event, and contact placing. 4) Customization attribute of login and configuration. 5) Community group form. 6) Connection link to private management, government, NGO, private institution, community, related infrastructures. 7) Commerce attributes of registration consists of required preferences of user name, email address, and password combination.


Poljoprivreda ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 79-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Plaščak ◽  
Jerko Glavaš ◽  
Željko Barač ◽  
Dorijan Radočaj ◽  
Mladen Jurišić

Spatial and environmental conditions on the agricultural land are invariable components and any plantation planning should take them into consideration. The conducted research presented methodology for suitability calculation of hazel plantations based on multicriteria analysis, performed in Vukovar-Srijem County. Nine criteria representing topographic, climate, pedology and infrastructure properties were modelled in GIS environment. Values of created layers were standardized using stepwise standardization and their respective weights were calculated by Analytical Hierarchical Process. These values were integrated using weighted linear combination, resulting with suitability values. The surrounding area of the City of Ilok had the highest suitability for hazel plantation in the studied locality, with maximum suitability 4.1 out of 5.0. Suitability was visualized on a thematic map, which enables farmers to interpret the data.


2008 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
ERWIN H. BULTE ◽  
RANDALL B. BOONE ◽  
RANDY STRINGER ◽  
PHILIP K. THORNTON

ABSTRACTTraditional grazing grounds near Amboseli National Park (Kenya) are being rapidly converted to cropland – a process that closes important wildlife corridors. We use a spatially explicit simulation model that integrates ecosystem dynamics and pastoral decision-making to explore the scope for introducing a ‘payments for ecosystem services’ scheme to compensate pastoralists for spillover benefits associated with forms of land use that are compatible with wildlife conservation. Our break-even cost analysis suggests that the benefits of such a scheme likely exceed its costs for a large part of the study area, but that ‘leakage effects’ through excessive stocking rates warrant close scrutiny.


2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 450-466
Author(s):  
. Hamzah Nurdin ◽  
. Sukanto ◽  
. Yunisvita

Purpose: this study aims to examine the community's decision to migrate between regions in the Jabodetabek area using the KRL Commuterline public transportation and analyse regional criteria based on regional development based on Oriented Development Transit, where these criteria become integration with community movements in migrating to an area.Methods: secondary data is used to fnd the number of people in migrating obtained from pt. Kai Indonesia. While to complete and explain each variable to be studied using primary data with several questions through a questionnaire submitted to 398 people who migrate between regions using logistic regression analysis techniques in their measurements. While to analyze the criteria for regional development in each region using an assessment approach from the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy. With qualitative analysis techniques and to assist in this research, a spatial approach is used which is used to display a picture of the distribution of migration.Results: (1) Regional development in each part of the Jabodetabek area is in the silver standard category which indicates that the regional development project has almost met the performance targets that have been conceptualized by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy. (2) People in making decisions to migrate between regions will be affected by the variables of distance, travel costs, gender, travel time, migration destination and regional development, while age and transit distance cannot provide a large enough influence on people's movements in migrating.Conclusions and Relevance: the results of the study prove that regional development in the Jabodetabek area tends to be a non-metropolitan area where people who move prefer areas that are integrated with public facilities that lead to the destination rather than towards the metropolitan area, this is evidenced by the standard silver criteria obtained in the area in Jabodetabek.


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