Sponsor
This research was funded by the National Geographic Society HJ-148R-17. Funding for all other analyses was from NSF grant EAR 1624207 to MBB, and a Research Experience for Undergraduates award to Florida Institute of Technology NSF REU 1359341.
Published In
Plants
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-2024
Subjects
Land Use practices -- Puru
Abstract
Changes in land-use practices have been a central element of human adaptation to Holocene climate change. Many practices that result in the short-term stabilization of socio-natural systems, however, have longer-term, unanticipated consequences that present cascading challenges for human subsistence strategies and opportunities for subsequent adaptations. Investigating complex sequences of interaction between climate change and human land-use in the past—rather than short-term causes and effects—is therefore essential for understanding processes of adaptation and change, but this approach has been stymied by a lack of suitably-scaled paleoecological data. Through a highresolution paleoecological analysis, we provide a 7000-year history of changing climate and land management around Lake Acopia in the Andes of southern Peru. We identify evidence of the onset of pastoralism, maize cultivation, and possibly cultivation of quinoa and potatoes to form a complex agrarian landscape by c. 4300 years ago. Cumulative interactive climate-cultivation effects resulting in erosion ended abruptly c. 2300 years ago. After this time, reduced sedimentation rates are attributed to the construction and use of agricultural terraces within the catchment of the lake. These results provide new insights into the role of humans in the manufacture of Andean landscapes and the incremental, adaptive processes through which land-use practices take shape.
Rights
Copyright: © 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/).
Locate the Document
DOI
10.3390/plants13071019
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/41751
Citation Details
Shadik, C.R.; Bush, M.B.; Valencia, B.G.; Rozas-Davila, A.; Plekhov, D.; Breininger, R.D.; Davin, C.; Benko, L.; Peterson, L.C.; VanValkenburgh, P. The Evolution of Agrarian Landscapes in the Tropical Andes. Plants 2024, 13, 1019. https:// doi.org/10.3390/plants13071019