Haberle Simon G
Department of Archaeology & Natural History, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 0200, Australia.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2007 Feb 28;362(1478):219-28. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2006.1981.
In the highlands of New Guinea, the development of agriculture as an indigenous innovation during the Early Holocene is considered to have resulted in rapid loss of forest cover, a decrease in forest biodiversity and increased land degradation over thousands of years. But how important is human activity in shaping the diversity of vegetation communities over millennial time-scales? An evaluation of the change in biodiversity of forest habitats through the Late Glacial transition to the present in five palaeoecological sites from highland valleys, where intensive agriculture is practised today, is presented. A detailed analysis of the longest and most continuous record from Papua New Guinea is also presented using available biodiversity indices (palynological richness and biodiversity indicator taxa) as a means of identifying changes in diversity. The analysis shows that the collapse of key forest habitats in the highland valleys is evident during the Mid - Late Holocene. These changes are best explained by the adoption of new land management practices and altered disturbance regimes associated with agricultural activity, though climate change may also play a role. The implications of these findings for ecosystem conservation and sustainability of agriculture in New Guinea are discussed.
在新几内亚高地,全新世早期作为一种本土创新的农业发展被认为导致了数千年来森林覆盖的迅速丧失、森林生物多样性的减少以及土地退化的加剧。但是,在数千年的时间尺度上,人类活动在塑造植被群落多样性方面有多重要呢?本文展示了对来自高地山谷的五个古生态遗址从末次冰期过渡到现在森林栖息地生物多样性变化的评估,如今这些地方都在进行集约化农业生产。还利用现有的生物多样性指数(孢粉丰富度和生物多样性指示类群)对来自巴布亚新几内亚最长且最连续的记录进行了详细分析,以此作为识别多样性变化的一种方法。分析表明,高地山谷关键森林栖息地在全新世中晚期明显崩溃。这些变化最好用新土地管理实践的采用以及与农业活动相关的干扰状况改变来解释,不过气候变化可能也起到了一定作用。本文还讨论了这些发现对新几内亚生态系统保护和农业可持续性的影响。