农业对非洲景观的影响

D. Wright
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摘要

作为人类历史记录最深的大陆,景观形成与人类生存实践密不可分。构成“农业”的活动可以进行一些讨论,但本质上讲的是人类、植物和动物生殖系统沿着相互依存的连续体的共同进化。这一过程一直在演变,但导致了景观的形成,在景观中,人类活动过程是该大陆几乎所有生物群落生态系统功能的特征。从广义上讲,整个非洲的种植实践在改变生态系统和景观的方式上各不相同。火灾作为景观管理工具的使用可以追溯到更新世,野生绵羊的饲养可以追溯到全新世早期。在引入农业之前,这些类型的人类活动改变了恐惧的景观,从根本上重组了非洲的营养系统。然而,到全新世中期,动物放牧和密集的植物栽培形式的引入与更显著的生态变化相关。农业景观的创建对一些地方的生物多样性产生了负面影响,而其他一些做法在不同时间点对生物多样性也产生了积极影响。现在人们已经认识到,人类长期以来一直影响着他们生活的任何地方的景观演变,但目前的研究重点是社会生态过程在古生态记录中的耦合位置、时间和方式。
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Impact of farming on African landscapes
As the continent with the deepest record of human history, the relationship between landscape formation and human subsistence practices is inseparable. The activities that constitute ‘farming’ are open for some matter of discussion, but essentially speak to the co-evolution of human, plant and animal reproductive systems along a continuum of interdependence. This process is ever evolving, but has resulted in the formation of landscapes in which anthropogenic processes characterize ecosystem functionality in nearly all biomes on the continent. Practices of cultivation, broadly conceptualized, across Africa are varied in the ways in which they have transformed ecological systems and landscapes. The use of fire as a landscape management tool dates to the Pleistocene, and penning of wild sheep to the early Holocene. The alteration of the landscape of fear by these types of human activities had fundamentally restructured trophic systems in Africa prior to the introduction of agriculture. However, the introduction of animal herding and intensive forms of plant cultivation by the middle Holocene correlated to even more significant ecological changes. The creation of agricultural landscapes has had a negative impact on biodiversity in some locations, whereas other some practices at different points in time have positively affected biodiversity. It is now recognized that humans have long influenced the evolution of landscapes wherever they live, but the current research focuses on where, when and how socio-ecological processes become coupled in the palaeoecological record.
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