Enduring Legacies of Agriculture: Long-term Vegetation Impacts of Ancestral Menominee Agriculture, Wisconsin, USA

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Madeleine McLeester, Alison E. Anastasio, Jeff Grignon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Agriculture significantly reshapes soils and ecology, often with lasting ecological impacts. For over a millennium, the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin have practiced maize agriculture in the upper Great Lakes. Though the vast majority of ancestral Indigenous agricultural sites have been destroyed in the American Midwest, the Menominee have documented numerous archaeological, raised garden bed sites at their Reservation, enabling an investigation into the lasting vegetation impacts of ancestral Menominee agricultural practices. Here, we report findings from our pilot vegetation surveys of three ancestral raised garden bed sites. Results show that all sites surveyed are high quality ecosystems. We observed differences in species richness between agricultural and non-agricultural places, although findings varied based on location. Overall, our surveys illustrate the complexity of these anthropogenic, biologically diverse landscapes shaped by past and contemporary Menominee land use and illustrate how today’s ecology is in part an enduring legacy of past practices.
农业的持久遗产:美国威斯康星州梅诺米尼人祖先农业对植被的长期影响
农业极大地重塑了土壤和生态,往往会对生态产生持久影响。一千多年来,威斯康星州的梅诺米尼印第安部落一直在五大湖上游地区从事玉米农业。虽然在美国中西部,绝大多数祖先的土著农业遗址已被毁坏,但梅诺米尼部落在其保留地记录了许多考古高架花坛遗址,这使得我们能够调查梅诺米尼祖先的农业实践对植被的持久影响。在此,我们报告了对三个祖先高架花坛遗址进行试点植被调查的结果。结果显示,所有调查地点都是高质量的生态系统。我们观察到农业区和非农业区的物种丰富度存在差异,但不同地点的调查结果也不尽相同。总之,我们的调查说明了这些由过去和当代梅诺米尼土地使用所形成的人为生物多样性景观的复杂性,并说明了今天的生态环境在一定程度上是过去的做法所遗留下来的。
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
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10
审稿时长
16 weeks
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