The development of late-Holocene farmed landscapes: Analysis of insect assemblages using a multi-period dataset/ (Record no. 12760)

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Personal name Smith, David
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Title The development of late-Holocene farmed landscapes: Analysis of insect assemblages using a multi-period dataset/
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Pages Vol 29, issue 1, 2019 : (45-63 p.).
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Summary, etc Global agricultural intensification and expansion has led to the spread of a fairly cosmopolitan insect fauna associated with arable land and pasture. Studies of modern expansion and intensification of agriculture have shown profound effects in terms of declines in biodiversity, with implications for current nature conservation. However, modern entomological studies of farmland faunas do not consider if such effects occurred over a longer period of time or are merely a modern phenomenon. We examine the substantial British archaeoentomological dataset for the development of beetle (Coleoptera) faunas in a range of intensively farmed archaeological landscapes dating from the late Neolithic through to the early Medieval period (c. 24,000 cal. BC–AD 900). The archaeological beetle fauna typically consisted of generalist species which still dominate modern farmland. Our analysis indicates that there is an essentially stable ‘core group’ of taxa that repeatedly occur regardless of period, location or the specific nature of the archaeological feature involved. On the basis of this result, we argue that the effects of the expansion of intensive farming on insect faunas seen in the modern world are a continuation of a longer pattern. We suggest that this is an example of human econiche replacement and ecosystem engineering. The approach taken here is applicable elsewhere in the world, and we offer suggestions for future British and international research strategies.
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Subject Archaeoentomology,
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Subject Coleoptera,
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Subject econiche replacement,
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Subject field systems,
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Subject landscape development,
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Subject prehistoric farming
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Added Entry Personal Name Hill, Geoff
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Added Entry Personal Name Kenward, Harry
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Host Biblionumber 12756
Host Itemnumber 16504
Place, publisher, and date of publication London: Sage Publication Ltd, 2019.
Title Holocene/
International Standard Serial Number 09596836
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Uniform Resource Identifier https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683618804645
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Koha item type Articles
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