Human-Mediated Prehistoric Marine Extinction in the Tropical Pacific? Understanding the Presence of Hippopus hippopus (Linn. 1758) in Ancient Shell Middens on the Rove Peninsula, Southwest Viti Levu Island, Fiji

被引:22
作者
Seeto, Johnson [2 ]
Nunn, Patrick D. [1 ]
Sanjana, Shalni [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ New England, Sch Behav Cognit & Social Sci, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia
[2] Univ S Pacific, Sch Marine Studies, Fac Sci Technol & Environm, Suva, Fiji
[3] Univ S Pacific, Res Off, Suva, Fiji
来源
GEOARCHAEOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL | 2012年 / 27卷 / 01期
关键词
GIANT CLAM; BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY; WESTERN KIRIBATI; SETTLEMENT; MICRONESIA; COLLAPSE; FAUNA; SITE;
D O I
10.1002/gea.21385
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
At the Lapita-era (1100-550 B.C.) settlements (Bourewa and Qoqo) along the Rove Peninsula in Fiji, valves of the reef-surface-dwelling giant clam Hippopus hippopus (long extirpated in Fiji) occur in shell midden. Valve size/weight increase with depth, suggesting that human predation contributed to its local disappearance. The timing of this event is constrained by (a) the confinement of H. hippopus remains to the lower part of the midden, (b) their likely association with only the stilt-platform occupation phase at both Bourewa and Qoqo (approximately 1100-900 B.C.), and (c) radiocarbon ages. All these suggest that H. hippopus disappeared from reefs here about 750 B.C. Yet human predation is not considered to be a significant cause of extirpation of H. hippopus in the entire Fiji group. More plausible is that (climate-driven) sea-level fall (55 cm) during Lapita times in Fiji (approximately 1100-550 B.C.) forced changes to coral-reef ecology that saw this sensitive species extirpated throughout the Fiji archipelago. It is also considered possible that the Lapita colonizers introduced bivalve predators or diseases to Fiji that spread independently of humans throughout these islands. (c) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:2 / 17
页数:16
相关论文
共 75 条
  • [1] ADAMS T, 1999, PACIFIC ISLANDS ENV, P366
  • [2] ADAMS TJH, 1988, WORKSH PAC INSH FISH
  • [3] Allen MelindaS., 1992, Asian Perspectives, V31, P183
  • [4] Mollusk collecting and environmental change during the Prehistoric Period in the Mariana Islands
    Amesbury, J. R.
    [J]. CORAL REEFS, 2007, 26 (04) : 947 - 958
  • [5] Amesbury Judith R., 1999, Micronesica, V31, P347
  • [6] Shell midden sclerochronology
    Andrus, C. Fred T.
    [J]. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2011, 30 (21-22) : 2892 - 2905
  • [7] [Anonymous], 1988, ACIAR MONOGR SER
  • [8] Athens J. S., 2002, ARCHAEOL OCEAN, V37, P57, DOI [DOI 10.1002/J.1834-4453.2002.TB00507.X, DOI 10.1002/j.1834-4453.2002.tb00507.x]
  • [9] The tropical giant clam Hippopus hippopus shell, a new archive of environmental conditions as revealed by sclerochronological and δ18O profiles
    Aubert, A.
    Lazareth, C. E.
    Cabioch, G.
    Boucher, H.
    Yamada, T.
    Iryu, Y.
    Farman, R.
    [J]. CORAL REEFS, 2009, 28 (04) : 989 - 998
  • [10] Assessing the causes of Late Pleistocene extinctions on the continents
    Barnosky, AD
    Koch, PL
    Feranec, RS
    Wing, SL
    Shabel, AB
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2004, 306 (5693) : 70 - 75