Humans and Forests in Pre-Colonial Southeast Asia

A. Reid
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Until about fifteen centuries ago the interaction of humans with the Southeast Asian rainforest was primarily one of interdependence. Trees were felled for food and aromatic woods, and in dryer zones to burn in a process of shifting cultivation, but population pressures were low enough for routine regeneration. Before the modern era of plantation agriculture and mechanised logging, two great changes had already affected the environment profoundly: (1) the elabo ration of permanently irrigated rice fields in upland valleys, creating substantial areas of permanent agricultural land progressively from about the 8th Century, and making possible greater concentrations of population, both agricultural and urban; (2) the rapid growth of commercial agriculture from the fifteenth century, primarily in pepper but later also sugar, cloves, gambier and coffee, which permanently deforested large areas of Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Vietnam and the Malayan Peninsula. Parallel with this development was the increased commer cial felling of forest trees for the export of sandalwood from Timor and sappanwood from Siam. The retreat of large mammals, notably elephant and rhinoceros, was one measure of these changes.
殖民前东南亚的人类与森林
直到大约15个世纪以前,人类与东南亚雨林的互动主要是一种相互依存。树木被砍伐是为了获取食物和芳香的木材,在干旱地区,树木在转移种植的过程中被焚烧,但人口压力足够低,可以进行常规的再生。在现代种植农业和机械化伐木时代之前,两大变化已经深刻地影响了环境:(1)在高地山谷中永久灌溉的稻田的精心设计,从大约8世纪开始逐步创造了大量的永久农业用地,并使农业和城市人口更加集中;(2)从15世纪开始,商业农业的迅速发展,主要是胡椒,后来也包括糖、丁香、甘比亚和咖啡,这使苏门答腊、爪哇、婆罗洲、越南和马来亚半岛的大片地区永久性地砍伐了森林。与这一发展相平行的是,为了从东帝汶出口檀香木和从暹罗出口苏木,商业砍伐森林树木的情况有所增加。大型哺乳动物,特别是大象和犀牛的减少,是这些变化的一个衡量标准。
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