‘The Menace of Acclimatization’: the advent of ‘anekeitaxonomy’ in Australia

IF 0.2 4区 哲学 Q4 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE Historical Records of Australian Science Pub Date : 2024-10-09 DOI:10.1071/hr24019
Simon Farley
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Abstract

Acclimatisation has been a profoundly important force in Australia’s history, yet scholars have routinely ignored or denigrated it, leaving it under-studied and misunderstood. Most accounts frame acclimatisation as a fad, briefly flourishing around the 1860s; scholars typically blame the spread of animal pests such as the rabbit for the sudden loss of interest in this branch of science. This article attempts to revise such accounts, demonstrating, on the contrary, that settler Australians continued to exhibit favourable attitudes towards acclimatisation and acclimatised wildlife well into the twentieth century. Focusing on wild birds, the article argues that acclimatisation was not consistently opposed by Australian naturalists until the second half of the 1930s, and indeed, that attempts to acclimatise non-native birds continued into the 1960s. Settler nationalism and xenophobia—rather than improved ecological theories or field data—are identified as the underlying motivation for the opponents of acclimatisation. The implications for present-day research into and management of non-native wildlife species are briefly considered.

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适应的威胁":澳大利亚 "nekeitaxonomy "的出现
适应性是澳大利亚历史上一股极其重要的力量,但学者们却经常忽视或诋毁它,导致对它的研究不足和误解。大多数说法都将适应性栽培描述为一种时尚,大约在 19 世纪 60 年代短暂兴盛;学者们通常将这一科学分支突然失去兴趣归咎于兔子等动物害虫的传播。这篇文章试图对这些说法进行修正,证明澳大利亚定居者直到二十世纪仍对适应性和适应性野生动物表现出积极的态度。文章以野生鸟类为重点,论证了直到 20 世纪 30 年代后半期,澳大利亚博物学家才开始一致反对适应化,事实上,适应化非本地鸟类的尝试一直持续到 20 世纪 60 年代。定居者民族主义和仇外心理--而非改进的生态理论或实地数据--被认为是反对适应化的根本动机。本文简要探讨了非本地野生动物物种的研究和管理对当今的影响。
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来源期刊
Historical Records of Australian Science
Historical Records of Australian Science HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
66.70%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Historical Records of Australian Science is a bi-annual journal that publishes two kinds of unsolicited manuscripts relating to the history of science, pure and applied, in Australia, New Zealand and the southwest Pacific. Historical Articles–original scholarly pieces of peer-reviewed research Historical Documents–either hitherto unpublished or obscurely published primary sources, along with a peer-reviewed scholarly introduction. The first issue of the journal (under the title Records of the Australian Academy of Science), appeared in 1966, and the current name was adopted in 1980.
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