The Global Land Project, (GLP, http://www.globallandproject.org) jointly established by the International Human Dimensions Program on Global Environmental Change (IHDP, http://www.ihdp.org/)
and the International Geosphere Biosphere Program (IGBP, http://www.igbp.net/) is the foremost international global change project promoting LCS for environmental sustainability. The GLP is planned around three research foci seeking to integrate a range of research questions towards an improved understanding of the dynamics of land change, the causes and consequences of land change, and RO4929097 assessment of system outcomes, notably vulnerability and resilience of land systems (GLP 2005; Turner et al. 2007). These GLP-related SGC-CBP30 efforts focus on sustainability issues arising from changes and responses to the synergistic operations of societal and environmental subsystems of land. They GSK2126458 mouse provide an opportunity for international scholars with different disciplinary backgrounds to address these complex issues arising from human–environment interactions that cannot be satisfactorily dealt
with by core disciplinary methods alone. This special feature documents progress in the fundamental components of LCS research. The issues addressed range from the sustainability of smallholder agriculture and urban systems to the impact of socioeconomic processes associated with globalization on biodiversity and ecosystem services supply. The first set of four papers exemplifies how models of varying
complexities can be used to unravel the association between land-use and its spatial determinants. Yin and Xiang combine remote sensing data with social dataset to assess interactions between different facets of agricultural land-use and their determinants. By developing and estimating a structural model of land-use using spatially explicit longitudinal observations from the upper Yangtze basin of China, they demonstrate that technical change mafosfamide helps in supplying food where per-capita cropland is limited. Technical change also helps to reduce soil erosion, which then benefits grain production in the longer term. The relationship between environmental loads (greenhouse gas emissions and farmland surplus nitrogen) and economic benefits (income from agricultural production) is addressed by Kimura et al. Eco-balance analysis for a watershed in Northern Japan showed that rice and soybean had high global warming potential (GWP), low farmland surplus nitrogen (FSN) and yields relatively high income. On the other hand, onion and vegetables had high FSN, low GWP and moderate income, whereas wheat showed negative GWP for some years, and abandoned land had a negative value.