前哥伦布时期多米尼加共和国特有啮齿动物的古饮食重建:野生进食行为与人类生态位构建活动相关饮食的区别

IF 1.1 3区 历史学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Gene T. Shev, Jason E. Laffoon
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在大安的列斯群岛,某些动物分类一直被认为在公元1492年之前由土著人民管理,主要的候选者是一群地方性的洞穴形啮齿动物,称为hutias (Capromyinae)。这项同位素研究调查了多米尼加共和国北部三个晚期前殖民遗址的几种特有啮齿动物的古饮食:El Flaco(公元990-1452年)、El Carril(公元1030-1262年)和La Entrada(公元840-900年),以评估人类对动物饮食的影响是否可以确定。本文测定了三种虎齿动物,即portoricensis、Isolobodon montanus和Plagiodontia aedium的骨胶原碳(δ13Cco)、氮(δ15N)和牙釉质碳(δ13Cen)的同位素值,以及食用大鼠(Brotomys sp.)和家鼠(Cavia porcellus)的同位素值。为了估算日粮来源的贡献,我们采用了贝叶斯日粮混合模型(FRUITS v.3.0),并运行了三种不同的排列来评估C3或C4/CAM植物的相对贡献。将来自已公布来源的79种野生C3和40种野生C4/CAM植物物种的同位素值添加到加勒比地区已建立的同位素食物网中,使我们能够在其中两个模型中区分野生和家养C3和C4/CAM植物食物来源。我们的研究结果提供了一些动物大量食用国内C4/CAM植物的证据。这可能代表了玉米(Zea mays)的消费,众所周知,该地区的土著人民普遍种植玉米。对于pororicensis来说尤其如此,因为FRUITS模型表明,一些个体消耗的C4/CAM植物远远超出了对现存hutia物种的摄食研究确定的预期的自然饮食。这可能表明,由于园艺实践等生态位建设活动,人类对地方性啮齿动物饮食产生了影响,并可能反映了人类对人类产品的机会性喂养或人类有目的地补充动物饮食。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Paleodietary reconstruction of endemic rodents from the precolumbian Dominican Republic: Discriminating wild feeding behavior from diets linked to human niche construction activities

Paleodietary reconstruction of endemic rodents from the precolumbian Dominican Republic: Discriminating wild feeding behavior from diets linked to human niche construction activities

In the Greater Antilles, certain animal taxa that have long been theorized to have been managed by indigenous peoples prior to AD1492, the main candidates being a group of endemic caviomorph rodents known as hutias (Capromyinae). This isotopic study investigates the paleodiets of several species of endemic rodents from three late precolonial sites in the northern Dominican Republic: El Flaco (cal. ad 990–1452), El Carril (cal. ad 1030–1262), and La Entrada (cal. ad 840–900) to assess whether human influence over animal diets can be determined. We examined bone collagen carbon (δ13Cco) and nitrogen (δ15N) and tooth enamel carbon (δ13Cen) isotope values of three species of hutias, Isolobodon portoricensis, Isolobodon montanus, and Plagiodontia aedium, alongside edible rat (Brotomys sp.), and domestic guinea pig (Cavia porcellus). To estimate dietary source contributions, we employed a Bayesian dietary mixing model (FRUITS v.3.0) and ran three different permutations to assess the relative contributions of C3 or C4/CAM plants. The addition of an extra 79 wild C3 and 40 wild C4/CAM plant species' isotope values from published sources to an established isotopic foodweb for the Caribbean region enabled us to discriminate between wild and domestic C3 and C4/CAM plant food sources in two of these models. Our results provide evidence of the significant consumption of domestic C4/CAM plants by some animals. This likely represents maize (Zea mays) consumption, which is known to have been ubiquitously cultivated by indigenous peoples in the region. This is particularly the case for I. portoricensis, as FRUITS modeling suggests that a few individuals consumed C4/CAM plants well beyond their expected natural diets as determined from feeding studies of extant hutia species. This may indicate human influence over endemic rodent diets due to niche construction activities such as horticultural practices and may reflect either opportunistic feeding on human produce or the purposeful supplementation of hutia diets by humans.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
105
期刊介绍: The aim of the International Journal of Osteoarchaeology is to provide a forum for the publication of papers dealing with all aspects of the study of human and animal bones from archaeological contexts. The journal will publish original papers dealing with human or animal bone research from any area of the world. It will also publish short papers which give important preliminary observations from work in progress and it will publish book reviews. All papers will be subject to peer review. The journal will be aimed principally towards all those with a professional interest in the study of human and animal bones. This includes archaeologists, anthropologists, human and animal bone specialists, palaeopathologists and medical historians.
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