globalchange  > 气候减缓与适应
DOI: 10.2993/0278-0771-39.2.240
WOS记录号: WOS:000482725200005
论文题名:
Sustainable Extractive Strategies in the Pre-European Contact Pacific: Evidence from Mollusk Resources
作者: Thomas, Frank R.
通讯作者: Thomas, Frank R.
刊名: JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY
ISSN: 0278-0771
EISSN: 2162-4496
出版年: 2019
卷: 39, 期:2, 页码:240-261
语种: 英语
英文关键词: archaeology ; Optimal Foraging Theory ; mollusk ecological and biological characteristics ; sustainability ; Kiribati
WOS关键词: BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY ; WESTERN KIRIBATI ; CLIMATE-CHANGE ; HUMAN IMPACTS ; ISLANDS ; REEF ; HISTORY ; SUBSISTENCE ; ARCHAEOLOGY ; MICRONESIA
WOS学科分类: Anthropology ; Biology
WOS研究方向: Anthropology ; Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
英文摘要:

Mollusk remains from archaeological and more recent historical contexts provide good proxies to assess environmental change, as well as human impact, both negatively and positively, as reflected, for example, by resource management practices. Rigorous testing of various hypotheses to explain change or relative stability in mollusk distribution in archaeological assemblages requires an understanding of ecological and biological (life history) characteristics of the represented species, as well as access to ethnographic and ethnoarchaeological data on the interaction between people and mollusks. A growing interest in contemporary indigenous resource management among Pacific Island communities has led some archaeologists to seek evidence for sustainable use of resources in the past, to complement the more widespread research conclusions that depict mollusk resource depression and/or shifts in species composition as consequences of negative human impact. Based on fieldwork in Kiribati, eastern Micronesia, and the application of Optimal Foraging Theory, this paper adds support to recent ethnographic, ethnoarchaeological, and archaeological case studies for the sustainable use of mollusks.


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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/126344
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作者单位: Univ South Pacific, Oceania Ctr Arts Culture & Pacific Studies, Suva, Fiji

Recommended Citation:
Thomas, Frank R.. Sustainable Extractive Strategies in the Pre-European Contact Pacific: Evidence from Mollusk Resources[J]. JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY,2019-01-01,39(2):240-261
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