Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.

Overexploitation of common-pool resources, resulting from uncooperative harvest behavior, is a major problem in many social-ecological systems. Feedbacks between user behavior and resource productivity induce non-linear dynamics in the harvest and the resource stock that complicate the understanding...

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Main Authors: Gunnar Brandt, Agostino Merico, Björn Vollan, Achim Schlüter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3532302?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-2ccf85a839a344a0a05b786e26e0578a2020-11-25T02:09:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5276310.1371/journal.pone.0052763Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.Gunnar BrandtAgostino MericoBjörn VollanAchim SchlüterOverexploitation of common-pool resources, resulting from uncooperative harvest behavior, is a major problem in many social-ecological systems. Feedbacks between user behavior and resource productivity induce non-linear dynamics in the harvest and the resource stock that complicate the understanding and the prediction of the co-evolutionary system. With an adaptive model constrained by data from a behavioral economic experiment, we show that users' expectations of future pay-offs vary as a result of the previous harvest experience, the time-horizon, and the ability to communicate. In our model, harvest behavior is a trait that adjusts to continuously changing potential returns according to a trade-off between the users' current harvest and the discounted future productivity of the resource. Given a maximum discount factor, which quantifies the users' perception of future pay-offs, the temporal dynamics of harvest behavior and ecological resource can be predicted. Our results reveal a non-linear relation between the previous harvest and current discount rates, which is most sensitive around a reference harvest level. While higher than expected returns resulting from cooperative harvesting in the past increase the importance of future resource productivity and foster sustainability, harvests below the reference level lead to a downward spiral of increasing overexploitation and disappointing returns.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3532302?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gunnar Brandt
Agostino Merico
Björn Vollan
Achim Schlüter
spellingShingle Gunnar Brandt
Agostino Merico
Björn Vollan
Achim Schlüter
Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Gunnar Brandt
Agostino Merico
Björn Vollan
Achim Schlüter
author_sort Gunnar Brandt
title Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.
title_short Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.
title_full Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.
title_fullStr Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.
title_full_unstemmed Human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.
title_sort human adaptive behavior in common pool resource systems.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Overexploitation of common-pool resources, resulting from uncooperative harvest behavior, is a major problem in many social-ecological systems. Feedbacks between user behavior and resource productivity induce non-linear dynamics in the harvest and the resource stock that complicate the understanding and the prediction of the co-evolutionary system. With an adaptive model constrained by data from a behavioral economic experiment, we show that users' expectations of future pay-offs vary as a result of the previous harvest experience, the time-horizon, and the ability to communicate. In our model, harvest behavior is a trait that adjusts to continuously changing potential returns according to a trade-off between the users' current harvest and the discounted future productivity of the resource. Given a maximum discount factor, which quantifies the users' perception of future pay-offs, the temporal dynamics of harvest behavior and ecological resource can be predicted. Our results reveal a non-linear relation between the previous harvest and current discount rates, which is most sensitive around a reference harvest level. While higher than expected returns resulting from cooperative harvesting in the past increase the importance of future resource productivity and foster sustainability, harvests below the reference level lead to a downward spiral of increasing overexploitation and disappointing returns.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3532302?pdf=render
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