首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Shellfish Research >Shifting through time: oysters and shell rings in past and present southeastern estuaries.
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Shifting through time: oysters and shell rings in past and present southeastern estuaries.

机译:随时间推移而变化:过去和现在东南河口的牡蛎和贝壳环。

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摘要

Oysters and oyster reefs are important components in the rich and productive southeastern US marsh-estuarine ecosystems. In recent decades, ecological research has shown that these complex systems can be driven by external biotic and abiotic perturbations or internal system dynamics that cause the system to rapidly reorganize into another alternate state or regime. Such shifts may have happened on a much larger scale several thousand years ago along the southeastern coast of North America. Beginning about 4,500 B.P., the coastal Native Americans built complex structures or oyster shell rings on the landward side of the southeastern sea islands of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. The construction of shell rings is believed to symbolize the conversion of nomadic hunter-gatherers to coastal fisherfolk and is considered a pivotal stage in the evolution of preEuropean contact culture in the United States. But, by about 3000 B.P., the shell rings were abandoned and the Native Americans dispersed. With the objective of learning from the past to help manage for the future, the Fig Island and Sewee shell ring systems near Charleston, South Carolina are analyzed using ecological comparisons with modern oyster systems, published archaeological and geological data, as well as reverse engineering approaches. In just a few years, the Indians built the Fig Island 1 shell ring using over 1.2 billion oysters. Had these oysters not been removed from the system, they would have cleared or filtered a water volume the size of North Inlet estuary near Georgetown, South Carolina about 6 times per day. This exercise examines the evidence on how the prehistoric system might have changed or shifted in response to the massive removal of oysters to build shell rings and concurrent changes in the natural environment.
机译:牡蛎和牡蛎礁是美国东南部沼泽和河口生态系统中生产力很高的重要组成部分。在最近的几十年中,生态学研究表明,这些复杂的系统可以由外部生物和非生物扰动或内部系统动力学驱动,这些扰动会导致系统迅速重组为另一个替代状态或状态。几千年前,这种变化可能发生在北美东南沿海。从约公元前4,500年开始,沿海美洲原住民在南卡罗来纳州,乔治亚州和佛罗里达州的东南海群岛的陆侧建造了复杂的结构或牡蛎壳环。贝壳环的构造被认为象征着游牧的采集者向沿海渔民的转变,并且被认为是美国前欧洲接触文化发展的关键阶段。但是,在约公元前3000年,贝壳环被废弃,美国原住民分散了。为了从过去的学习中为将来的管理提供帮助,我们对南卡罗来纳州查尔斯顿附近的无花果岛和Sewee贝壳环系统进行了分析,方法是与现代牡蛎系统进行生态比较,发布考古和地质数据,以及反向工程方法。在短短几年内,印第安人用超过12亿只牡蛎建造了无花果岛1号贝壳环。如果这些牡蛎没有从系统中移出,它们将每天清理或过滤大约6次,其水量相当于南卡罗来纳州乔治敦附近北入口河口的大小。本练习研究了史前系统如何响应于牡蛎的大量移出以建立壳环以及自然环境的同时变化而发生了变化或转移的证据。

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