Assessing the impact and legacy of swidden farming in neotropical interfluvial environments through exploratory modelling of post-contact Piaroa land use (Upper Orinoco, Venezuela)
Authored by Philip Riris
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1177/0959683617752857
Sponsors:
Leverhulme Trust
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://journals-sagepub-com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/doi/suppl/10.1177/0959683617752857
Abstract
Humans are increasingly viewed as active agents of environmental and
land-cover change in the moist Neotropics. While the scale and extent of
pre-Columbian anthropic impacts are actively debated, the effects of
post-Contact patterns of land use are rarely examined over the long
term, defined here as centennial timescales. This article examines a
putative area of historical low human impact located in the western
Guiana Shield, the upper Cuao River, using an exploratory agent-based
modelling approach. Based on an extensive ethnographic literature on the
Piaroa, who have inhabited the region for at least four centuries, the
model investigates the legacy effects of ethnographic patterns of land
use in the interval between European Contact and the present. Model
outcomes indicate that the potential range of anthropic changes to the
environment of the study area is significantly greater in scale than
previously assumed. Interpretative discrepancies between present
vegetation conditions and the model are likely the product of sparse
palaeoecological and archaeological research in the upper Cuao. More
broadly, the results imply that small-scale agriculture and agroforestry
can lead to extensive and persistent structural changes to ecosystems in
relatively short timescales. The experiment bolsters existing cautions
against assuming the `natural' baseline of Neotropic forests based on
present appearance. As a form of middle-range theory, the model
demonstrates how computational approaches can promote closer
integrations between ecological, archaeological, and ethnohistorical
data, as well as frame the expectations of future research.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
Simulation
Dynamics
Archaeology
Biodiversity
Amazonia
Cover change
Domestication
Forest
Landscapes
Rain-forest
Multiagent
Historical ecology
Cultivation
Anthropocene
Orinoco
Swidden agriculture
Pre-columbian amazonia
Shifting
cultivation