Changes in limiting factors for forager population dynamics in Europe across the last glacial-interglacial transition

被引:0
作者
Alejandro Ordonez
Felix Riede
机构
[1] Aarhus University,Center for Biodiversity Dynamics in a Changing World
[2] Aarhus University,Department of Biology
[3] Aarhus University,Center for Sustainable Landscapes under Global Change
[4] Aarhus University,Department of Archaeology and Heritage Studies
来源
Nature Communications | / 13卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Population dynamics set the framework for human genetic and cultural evolution. For foragers, demographic and environmental changes correlate strongly, although the causal relations between different environmental variables and human responses through time and space likely varied. Building on the notion of limiting factors, namely that at any one time, the scarcest resource caps population size, we present a statistical approach to identify the dominant climatic constraints for hunter-gatherer population densities and then hindcast their changing dynamics in Europe for the period between 21,000 to 8000 years ago. Limiting factors shifted from temperature-related variables (effective temperature) during the Pleistocene to a regional mosaic of limiting factors in the Holocene dominated by temperature seasonality and annual precipitation. This spatiotemporal variation suggests that hunter-gatherers needed to overcome very different adaptive challenges in different parts of Europe and that these challenges varied over time. The signatures of these changing adaptations may be visible archaeologically. In addition, the spatial disaggregation of limiting factors from the Pleistocene to the Holocene coincided with and may partly explain the diversification of the cultural geography at this time.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 183 条
[1]  
Metcalf CJ(2007)Why evolutionary biologists should be demographers Trends Ecol. Evol. 22 205-212
[2]  
Pavard S(2021)A manifesto for palaeodemography in the twenty-first century Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B Biol. Sci. 376 20190707-199
[3]  
French JC(2016)Demography and the Palaeolithic archaeological record J. Archaeol. Method Th. 23 150-214
[4]  
Riris P(2004)Demography and cultural evolution: how adaptive cultural processes can produce maladaptive losses - The Tasmanian case Am. Antiquity 69 197-1301
[5]  
Fernandez-Lopez de Pablo J(2009)Late Pleistocene demography and the appearance of modern human behavior Science 324 1298-16
[6]  
Lozano S(2001)Demography and cultural innovation: a model and its implications for the emergence of modern human culture Camb. Archaeol. J. 11 5-51
[7]  
Silva F(2020)The palaeodemographic and environmental dynamics of prehistoric Arctic Norway: an overview of human-climate covariation Quat. Int. 549 36-1800
[8]  
French JC(2019)Convergent catastrophes and the termination of the Arctic Norwegian Stone Age: a multi-proxy assessment of the demographic and adaptive responses of mid-Holocene collectors to biophysical forcing Holocene 29 1782-225
[9]  
Henrich J(2011)Did the mid-Holocene environmental changes cause the boom and bust of hunter-gatherer population size in eastern Fennoscandia? Holocene 22 215-484
[10]  
Powell A(2018)Hindcasting global population densities reveals forces enabling the origin of agriculture Nat. Hum. Behav. 2 478-8237