Landscapes created by millennia of cultural land use in the Fleurieu Group of Islands, Tasmania—a knowledge baseline for current and future land management under changing climates

Matthew Adesanya Adeleye, Simon Graeme Haberle, Stephen Harris, Sue O’Connor, Sandra Bowdler
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Abstract

Aboriginal peoples have managed Australian landscapes for millennia; however, deep-time paleoecological evidence of the nature of landscape modification remains rare. The Fleurieu Group of islands in Bass Strait was one of the areas actively used by Aboriginal people in lutruwita (Tasmania), until forced dispossession of their lands due to European colonization occurred over 230 years ago, with subsequent land use including leaseholder pastoralism and nature conservation. There are emerging opportunities for greater input from Aboriginal people into land management of the islands now and into the future. This investigation of the long-term human–island ecosystem interactions in the area is aimed at providing a greater understanding of the impact of land-use changes on biodiversity and ecosystem change through time. Holocene multi-proxy paleoecological records from the islands show periods of low to high intensity land use, with the highest intensity periods occurring around 8500–6500 BP and the last 2000 years. Aboriginal land use in the past ∼2000 BP promoted a complex mosaic biodiverse landscape and provides a baseline for current and future land management on the islands and elsewhere in Tasmania.
塔斯马尼亚岛Fleurieu群岛数千年的文化土地利用所创造的景观-在气候变化下当前和未来土地管理的知识基础
土著居民几千年来一直管理着澳大利亚的景观;然而,关于景观改造性质的深时间古生态证据仍然很少。巴斯海峡的Fleurieu群岛是卢特鲁维塔(塔斯马尼亚)土著居民积极使用的地区之一,直到230多年前欧洲殖民迫使他们的土地被剥夺,随后的土地使用包括租赁人畜牧业和自然保护。现在和将来出现了土著人民更多地投入岛屿土地管理的机会。通过对该地区长期人岛生态系统相互作用的调查,旨在更好地了解土地利用变化对生物多样性和生态系统变化的影响。岛屿全新世多代古生态记录显示出土地利用强度从低到高的不同时期,其中土地利用强度最高的时期出现在8500 ~ 6500 BP前后和近2000年。过去~ 2000年前的土著土地利用促进了复杂的马赛克生物多样性景观,并为塔斯马尼亚岛和其他地方当前和未来的土地管理提供了基线。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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