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原生于接触前时代的龙舌兰属植物——亚利桑那州景观中的活遗产植物。

Pre-contact Agave domesticates - living legacy plants in Arizona's landscape.

机构信息

Desert Botanical Garden, 1201 N. Galvin Parkway, Phoenix, AZ 85008, USA.

出版信息

Ann Bot. 2023 Nov 25;132(4):835-853. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcad113.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND SCOPE

Agaves played a central role as multi-use plants providing food, fibre and beverage to pre-contact and historical Mesoamerican cultures. However, their importance to Indigenous Peoples in the Southwest USA and northern Mexico, where they occur because of adaptations such as CAM photosynthesis, is less well known. Archaeological research indicates the Hohokam and other pre-contact Southwestern agrarian people increased agricultural potential in this region by engineering riverine terraces and bajadas for agave dry farming. Agricultural features such as terraces and rock piles were especially characteristic of post-1000 CE with the increase of dense, aggregated populations. We present an overview of six pre-contact agave domesticates (PCADs) the Hohokam and other cultures cultivated, and their ecological and cultural attributes. These PCADs are Agave murpheyi, A. delamateri, A. phillipsiana, A. sanpedroensis, A. verdensis and A. yavapaiensis.

CONCLUSION

Pre-contact agriculturists cultivated at least six once cryptic domesticated agave species in the modern Arizona landscape associated with pre-contact agricultural features, such as rock structures. Because of the longevity and primarily asexual reproduction of these agaves, relict clones have persisted to the present day, providing an opportunity to study pre-contact nutrition, trade, migration and agricultural practices. Taxonomic data imply that pre-contact farmers selected desirable attributes, initiating domestication processes that resulted in discrete lineages. These agaves are morphologically and genetically distinct from Southwest US and northern Mexico wild agaves and Mesoamerican wild and domesticated species. Additionally, the remnant clones present a rare opportunity to examine domesticates virtually unchanged since they were last cultivated prehistorically. These discoveries underline the need to view landscapes and some plant species from a cultural, rather than 'natural', perspective and discern potential cryptic species veiled by traditional taxonomic treatments. Protecting and understanding the distribution, and ecological and cultural roles of these plants require interdisciplinary collaboration between botanists, archaeologists, federal agencies and Indigenous Peoples.

摘要

背景与范围

龙舌兰作为一种多用途植物,为前接触期和中美洲历史文化提供了食物、纤维和饮料,发挥了核心作用。然而,由于景天酸代谢等适应特性,它们在美国西南部和墨西哥北部的原住民中也很重要,在这些地方它们的分布范围更广。考古研究表明,霍霍坎人和其他前接触时期的西南部农民通过建造河滨梯田和 bajadas 来种植龙舌兰,从而增加了该地区的农业潜力。梯田和石堆等农业特征尤其具有特色,尤其是在公元 1000 年后,人口密集,聚居程度增加。我们概述了霍霍坎人和其他文化种植的六种前接触期龙舌兰驯化种(PCAD)及其生态和文化特征。这些 PCAD 是 Agave murpheyi、A. delamateri、A. phillipsiana、A. sanpedroensis、A. verdensis 和 A. yavapaiensis。

结论

前接触时期的农民在现代亚利桑那州的景观中种植了至少六种曾经是隐性驯化的龙舌兰物种,这些龙舌兰与前接触时期的农业特征有关,例如石结构。由于这些龙舌兰具有长寿和主要的无性繁殖特性,因此遗留下来的克隆体一直延续到今天,为研究前接触时期的营养、贸易、迁徙和农业实践提供了机会。分类学数据表明,前接触时期的农民选择了理想的特征,启动了驯化过程,从而产生了不同的谱系。这些龙舌兰在形态和遗传上与美国西南部和墨西哥北部的野生龙舌兰以及中美洲的野生和驯化物种不同。此外,这些残余的克隆体提供了一个难得的机会,可以研究自前历史时期最后一次种植以来几乎没有变化的驯化植物。这些发现强调了需要从文化而不是“自然”的角度看待景观和一些植物物种,并辨别被传统分类处理方法掩盖的潜在隐性物种。保护和了解这些植物的分布、生态和文化角色需要植物学家、考古学家、联邦机构和原住民之间的跨学科合作。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c9b0/10799993/cbd848068490/mcad113_fig1.jpg

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