Department of Anthropology, Trent University, 1600 Westbank Drive, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada K9L 0G2.
School of Archaeology and Ancient History, University of Leicester, Mayor's Walk, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2024 Aug;291(2027):20240674. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2024.0674. Epub 2024 Jul 24.
Protecting ocean habitats is critical for international efforts to mitigate climate impacts and ensure food security, but the ecological data upon which policy makers base conservation and restoration targets often reflect ecosystems that have already been deeply impacted by anthropogenic change. The archaeological record is a biomolecular archive offering a temporal scope that cannot be gathered from historical records or contemporary fieldwork. Insights from biogeochemical and osteometric analyses of fish bones, combined with context from contemporary field studies, show how prehistoric fisheries in the western Baltic relied on seagrass meadows. European eels () harvested by Mesolithic and Neolithic peoples over millennia showed a strong fidelity for eelgrass foraging habitats, an ecological relationship that remains largely overlooked today, demonstrating the value of protecting these habitats. These data open new windows onto ecosystem- and species-level behaviours, highlighting the need for wider incorporation of archaeological data in strategies for protecting our oceans.
保护海洋生境对于国际社会减轻气候影响和确保粮食安全的努力至关重要,但政策制定者赖以制定保护和恢复目标的生态数据往往反映了已经受到人为变化深刻影响的生态系统。考古记录是一个生物分子档案,提供了无法从历史记录或当代实地工作中收集到的时间范围。对鱼类骨骼进行的生物地球化学和骨骼测量分析的结果,结合当代实地研究的背景,表明了在过去,波罗的海西部的史前渔业是如何依赖海草草甸的。在几千年的时间里,中石器时代和新石器时代的人类捕捞的欧洲鳗鱼 () 对鳗草觅食栖息地表现出强烈的适应性,这种生态关系在今天仍然在很大程度上被忽视,这表明保护这些栖息地的价值。这些数据为我们提供了了解生态系统和物种层面行为的新窗口,强调了在保护我们的海洋的战略中更广泛地纳入考古数据的必要性。