School of Geography, University of Melbourne, 221 Bouverie Street, Carlton, VIC, 3053, Australia.
Ambio. 2021 Jan;50(1):138-149. doi: 10.1007/s13280-020-01339-3. Epub 2020 May 6.
Indigenous people play an integral role in shaping natural environments, and the disruption to Indigenous land management practices has profound effects on the biosphere. Here, we use pollen, charcoal and dendrochronological analyses to demonstrate that the Australian landscape at the time of British invasion in the 18th century was a heavily constructed one-the product of millennia of active maintenance by Aboriginal Australians. Focusing on the Surrey Hills, Tasmania, our results reveal how the removal of Indigenous burning regimes following British invasion instigated a process of ecological succession and the encroachment of cool temperate rainforest (i.e. later-stage vegetation communities) into grasslands of conservation significance. This research provides empirical evidence to challenge the long-standing portrayal of Indigenous Australians as low-impact 'hunter-gatherers' and highlights the relevance and critical value of Indigenous fire management in this era of heightened bushfire risk and biodiversity loss.
原住民在塑造自然环境方面发挥着不可或缺的作用,而对原住民土地管理实践的破坏对生物圈产生了深远的影响。在这里,我们使用花粉、木炭和树木年代学分析来证明,在 18 世纪英国入侵时,澳大利亚景观是一个经过精心构建的景观——这是几千年来澳大利亚原住民积极维护的产物。我们专注于塔斯马尼亚的萨利山,研究结果揭示了在英国入侵后,原住民燃烧制度的取消如何引发了生态演替过程,以及凉爽的温带雨林(即后期植被群落)如何侵入具有保护意义的草原。这项研究提供了实证证据,挑战了长期以来将澳大利亚原住民描绘为低影响的“狩猎采集者”的观点,并强调了在当前丛林大火风险和生物多样性丧失加剧的时代,原住民火管理的相关性和关键价值。