INTRODUCTION
For more than 150 years, beginning with Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace, islands have been central to investigations of evolution, biogeography, ecology and human–environmental interactions. Islands offer natural and historical scientists ecological systems to test theories about the past, present and future at scales that are smaller and more manageable than continental systems (Kirch Reference Kirch1997: 30). Studying the ecological history of islands can help elucidate the complex interplay between humans and environmental change, providing a framework for examining human influence and impacts in once-pristine environments (e.g. Erlandson & Fitzpatrick Reference Erlandson and Fitzpatrick2006; Rick et al. Reference Rick, Kirch, Erlandson and Fitzpatrick2013). Records of island responses to climatic fluctuations and human influence span millennia of land and seascape modification, introduction of biota, extinctions and other activities, which are often more clearly visible on island versus continental systems (Steadman & Martin Reference Steadman and Martin2003; Wroe et al. Reference Wroe, Field and Grayson2006; Rick et al. Reference Rick, Kirch, Erlandson and Fitzpatrick2013).
Even as scientists debate its genesis, the growing magnitude of human-driven environmental changes makes it increasingly clear that we now live in the Anthropocene, the geologic age of humans (e.g. Erlandson & Braje Reference Erlandson and Braje2013; Braje Reference Braje2015; Lewis & Maslin Reference Lewis and Maslin2015; Ruddiman et al. Reference Ruddiman, Ellis, Kaplan and Fuller2015; Zalasiewicz et al. Reference Zalasiewicz, Waters, Williams, Barnosky, Cearreta, Crutzen, Ellis, Ellis, Fairchild, Grinevald, Haff, Hajdas, Leinfelder, McNeill, Odada, Poirier, Richter, Steffen, Summerhayes, Syvitski, Vidas, Wagreich, Wing, Wolfe, An and Oreskes2015; Waters et al. Reference Waters, Zalasiewicz, Summerhayes, Barnosky, Poirier, Galuszka, Cearreta, Edgeworth, Ellis, Ellis, Jeandel, Leinfelder, McNeill, deB. Richter, Steffen, Syvitski, Vidas, Wagreich, Williams, Zhisheng, Grinevald, Odada, Oreskes and Wolfe2016). Most geoscientists argue that the ‘age of humans’ began sometime in the last 50 years, but many archaeologists and other historical scientists recognize the millennia-long, complex interplay between humans and their local, regional and global environments that shaped the Anthropocene. Today, many islands are threatened by accelerating environmental instability and uncertainty. Sea level rise, declining biodiversity, extinctions, landscape clearance and invasions by non-native species have fundamentally reshaped island ecosystems. Archaeological, palaeoenvironmental and historical ecological research, especially over the last two decades, demonstrates that anthropogenic alterations of terrestrial and marine ecosystems are not recent phenomena, but extend into deep antiquity (e.g. Jackson & Hobbs Reference Jackson and Hobbs2009; Erlandson & Rick Reference Rick and Erlandson2010; Boivin et al. Reference Boivin, Zeder, Fuller, Crowther, Larson, Erlandson, Denham and Petraglia2016). Evidence for human impacts on islands and archipelagos continues to rapidly accumulate, suggesting that the available data may represent the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Nonetheless, archaeology and other historical sciences now play a critical role in understanding the modern state of these ecosystems, predicting future outcomes and managing natural resources (Wolverton et al. Reference Wolverton, Nagaoka and Rick2016; Barnosky et al. Reference Barnosky, Hadly, Gonzalez, Head, Polly, Lawing, Eronen, Ackerly, Alex, Biber, Blois, Brashares, Ceballos, Davis, Dietl, Dirzo, Doremus, Fortelius, Greene, Hellman, Hickler, Jackson, Kemp, Koch, Kremen, Lindsey, Looy, Marshall, Mendenhall, Mulch, Mychajliw, Nowak, Ramakrishnan, Schnitzler, Das Shrestha, Solari, Stegner, Allison Stegner, Chr. Stenseth, Wake and Zhang2017).
Research has produced cases of ecosystem degradation resulting from human activities and introductions (purposeful or accidental) of invasive plants and animals and cases of active management of resources to enhance productivity and build long-term sustainable systems. These demonstrate the complexity of human–environmental interactions and offer perspectives on building future sustainable systems.
Most basically, historical ecology integrates ecology and historical sciences (Rick & Lockwood Reference Rick and Lockwood2013: 46) into a multifaceted discipline that is focused on the evolution of ecosystems, the effects of anthropogenic and natural changes and the relationship between humans and their environments. Archaeology is an increasingly essential component of historical ecology, offering important insights into past biotic abundances and distributions, the structure and function of ecosystems, system variability, harvest thresholds and desired future conditions (see Lotze et al. Reference Lotze, Erlandson, Hardt, Norris, Roy, Smith, Whitcraft, Jackson, Alexander and Sala2011; Braje & Rick Reference Braje and Rick2013: 310). While much historical ecological research comes from continental systems, island research has produced numerous examples of how understanding long-term human–environmental interactions and legacies of land and sea use can help guide future resource management.
We begin by reviewing the global history of human island colonization, then summarize changes to island systems after initial settlement by agriculturalists or sedentary foragers (or by hunter–gatherer–fishers, where relevant) and post-fifteenth century Euro–American colonialism. We focus on four case studies, including the initial colonization of Near Oceania by Pleistocene hunter–gatherer–fishers and the later settlement of remote Pacific Islands by maritime agriculturalists; Mediterranean and Caribbean islands by hunter–gatherer–fishers, horticulturalists and agriculturalists; and California's Northern Channel Islands by hunter–gatherer–fishers (Fig. 1). Each case study explores how ancient people impacted island ecosystems, and how such impacts varied spatially, temporally and culturally. We explore the lessons that archaeological and other historical perspectives offer for the future management of island ecosystems.
These case studies include examples of colonization and human impacts on both oceanic and continental islands. Differences in physiography – from the size and isolation of islands to their status as continental versus remote oceanic islands – may play a central role in predicting the structure and degree of human impacts. Since species richness increases with island area and decreases with island isolation, for example, a complex mix of factors influenced the degree of human forcing on island landscapes and seascapes through time. Some small, remote islands in the Pacific were quickly and irrevocably transformed by initial human colonization, then abandoned after human settlement became unsustainable. Processes of extinction, erosion and ecological transformation are often easier to decode and link to anthropogenic activities in smaller, remote islands than larger continental islands. These factors were especially influential during initial prehistoric colonizations. While we touch on these, future research can explore the often subtle (but at times dramatic) differences across islands in order to better understand how translocation, isolation and circumscription influenced ancient human–environmental ecodynamics.
FROM COLONIZATION TO COLONIALISM
Human colonization of many islands began early, with oceans and coastlines around the globe serving as pathways for the spread of anatomically modern humans (AMHs) (Erlandson Reference Erlandson, Anderson, Barrett and Boyle2010). Homo erectus colonized Flores and other Southeast Asian islands even earlier, by c. 1,000,000 years ago (Brumm et al. Reference Brumm, Jensen, van den Bergh, Morwood, Kurniawan, Aziz and Storey2010), although whether this resulted from active seafaring or passive dispersal remains unknown (Dennell et al. Reference Dennell, Louys, O'Regan and Wilkinson2014). Extensive evidence of island colonization by AMHs is found shortly after their spread out of Africa, however, perhaps along a coastal ‘southern dispersal’ corridor, with the colonization of Island Southeast Asia, Australia and New Guinea c. 50,000 years ago and western Melanesia and the Ryukyu Islands c. 35,000–40,000 years ago (Erlandson Reference Erlandson, Anderson, Barrett and Boyle2010; Fujita et al. Reference Fujita, Yamasaki, Katagiri, Oshiro, Sano, Kurozumi, Sugawara, Kunikita, Matsuzaki, Kano, Okumura, Sone, Fujita, Kobayashi, Naruse, Kondo, Matsu'ura, Suwa and Kaifu2016). Winds, currents and technology influenced the timing and nature of island colonization, and understanding these variables contributes to decoding the timing of human–island interactions. Variation in the subsistence practices of island explorers also resulted in very different impacts on island ecosystems. Colonization by hunter–gatherer–fishers generally resulted in less sweeping changes than colonization by agriculturalists, who tended to introduce a wider range of exotic (domesticated and wild) plants and animals, both intentionally and unintentionally. In many cases, humans created new anthropogenic ecologies, causing extinctions, trophic cascades and no-analogue ecological states.
Generally, anthropogenic changes resulting from initial human colonization pale in comparison to those from post-colonial contacts. European colonialism quickly overwhelmed island ecosystems (Mann Reference Mann2011), which had already been influenced by indigenous peoples for centuries to millennia. Islands were integrated into global economies and transformed into agrarian plantation and production centres, long-distance trade and whaling stations and mercantile networks (Lightfoot et al. Reference Lightfoot, Panich, Schneider and Gonzalez2013). The scale and intensity of island transformations during this period far outpaced indigenous impacts, resulting in novel systems far removed from a ‘natural’ state. In the case studies below, we concentrate on broad patterns of human impacts and highlight the complexities of unravelling human impacts given physical variation in island size, location and isolation, as well as the nature of cultural adaptations.
TRANSPORTED LANDSCAPES OF THE PACIFIC
Around the world, human dispersal to islands often involved translocation of plants and animals. The human presence on the islands of Near Oceania as early as c. 32,000 years ago was largely no different, although the number of Pleistocene sites is relatively small and the data ephemeral (Summerhayes et al. Reference Summerhayes, Field, Shaw and Gaffney2016). Late Pleistocene peoples who colonized islands within the circum-New Guinea Archipelago (CNG) – including the Moluccas, Sulawesi, Lesser Sundas, Bismarcks and Solomons – translocated animals between c. 20,000 and 3000 years ago, including the Pacific rat (Rattus exulans) and species of cuscus (family: Phalangeridae) and pademelon (Thylogale spp.) (e.g. Flannery et al. Reference Flannery, Kirch, Specht and Spriggs1988; White Reference White and Fitzpatrick2004). Northern Sahul and the CNG also provide evidence for the exploitation and translocation of tropical plants such as the Galip nut (Canarium indicum) as long as 14,000 years ago (Summerhayes et al. Reference Summerhayes, Field, Shaw and Gaffney2016). Regarding extinctions and extirpations, research has focused on megafaunal disappearances across Sahul (Australia, New Guinea and Tasmania during the last glacial maximum (LGM)), with debates surrounding the human agency of such changes (e.g. Johnson et al. Reference Johnson, Alroy, Beeton, Bird, Brook, Cooper, Gillespie, Herrando-Pérez, Jacobs, Miller, Prideaux, Roberts, Rodríguez-Rey, Saltré, Turney and Bradshaw2016; Saltré et al. Reference Saltré, Rodriguez-Rey, Brook, Johnson, Turney, Alroy, Cooper, Beeton, Bird, Fordham, Gillespie, Herrando-Perez, Jacobs, Miller, Nogues-Bravo, Prideaux, Roberts and Bradshaw2016). For Pleistocene New Ireland, Steadman et al. (Reference Steadman, White and Allen1999) noted bird taxa now absent on the Bismarcks and tentatively suggested human-driven extirpation. Given the clear evidence for human impacts on insular avifaunas elsewhere in the Pacific, the Bismarck data may indicate that modern CNG biotas are the survivors of a Late Pleistocene disturbance event.
Human ecodynamics in Remote Oceania have operated on scales that are different from those of Near Oceania, structured in many ways by the immensity of the Pacific and the constraints isolation imposes on ecological and evolutionary organization. The relative spatial constriction of truly ‘oceanic’ islands (i.e. those with submarine volcanic origins) also renders Oceanic ecosystems highly sensitive to external influence.
Due to the sheer distance between landmasses, the settlement of Remote Oceania was late compared to our other case studies. First evidence for human settlement in the region comes from Lapita sites that stretch from the Reef/Santa Cruz Islands in the west through several major island groups, including Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Fiji and then eventually to Sāmoa and Tonga in the east. These population dispersals are generally contemporaneous with non-Lapita sites in the Marianas and Palau, which may date between c. 3400 and 2900 before present (BP) (see Fitzpatrick Reference Fitzpatrick2003; Clark et al. Reference Clark, Anderson and Wright2006; Sheppard et al. Reference Sheppard, Chu and Walter2015). Long-distance migrations were enabled by outrigger and sailing technology (Irwin Reference Irwin1994). After nearly two millennia, eastward colonization occurred in pulses – possibly related to El Niño/Southern Oscillation cycling (Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Chappell, Gagan and Grove2006; Montenegro et al. Reference Montenegro, Callaghan and Fitzpatrick2016) – into central and eastern Micronesia and central Polynesia and then, by 1200–800 BP, to Rapa Nui/Easter Island, Hawai'i and Aotearoa/New Zealand (Wilmshurst et al. Reference Wilmshurst, Hunt and Anderson2011; Athens et al. Reference Athens, Rieth and Dye2014; Goodwin et al. Reference Goodwin, Browning and Anderson2014).
The natural biotas of Remote Oceania were comprised solely of successful long-distance colonists that evolved in isolation from continental taxa. The arrival of humans and associated species had transformative effects. Avifaunal extinctions are well documented (e.g. Steadman & Martin Reference Steadman and Martin2003; Anderson Reference Anderson2009), driven by direct predation, habitat destruction and the introduction of predatory commensals such as dogs (Canis spp.) and the Pacific rat. Extirpation of endemic birds drove broader environmental change, especially affecting nutrient cycling (Kirch Reference Kirch1996). Long-term effects of these anthropogenic ecological reorganizations – occurring as variations on a theme across Remote Oceania – were exacerbated by land clearance and the introduction of successful domesticates. Initial Lapita colonization, and later post-Lapita movements, carried into island environments a suite of domesticates that changed little from 3500 to 800 BP, including taro (Colocasia esculenta), coconut (Cocos nucifera), breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis), yam (Dioscorea spp.), banana (Musa spp.), pigs (Sus spp.), dogs, chickens (Gallus spp.) and rats (e.g. Anderson Reference Anderson2009). Later, the sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) was brought from South America into East Polynesia and became a major staple. These ‘transported landscapes’ were imposed on islands already experiencing post-colonization ecological trauma, resulting in similarly organized anthropogenic ecosystems. In their eastward expansion, colonizing humans also escaped some demographic constraints common to their homelands, including pathogens and their vectors not native to Remote Oceania, such as Plasmodium-bearing anopheline mosquitoes. This may have accelerated human population growth rates in Remote Oceania.
The human presence on previously unoccupied tropical islands implanted with successful horticultural systems also encouraged rapid growth among Pacific Islander populations. Demographic reconstructions are fraught with uncertainty, but a general pattern across Remote Oceania – clearly exemplified in Hawai‘i with Dye and Komori's (Reference Dye and Komori1992) modelling of cumulative radiocarbon dates – involved steep initial r-type growth, with curves flattening as carrying capacity (K) was approached (Kirch & Rallu Reference Kirch and Rallu2007). Combined with the geography of the Pacific, rapid population growth exerted profound pressure on Oceanic societies and fragile island ecosystems. Strategies to mitigate this pressure drove a series of socioecological and sociopolitical outcomes.
Subsistence intensification – a means of artificially increasing K – is evident across Remote Oceania, frequently in the form of landscape modification. Terracing and hydrological management are conspicuous in the Hawaiian archipelago as well as the Marquesas, Society Islands and Sāmoa (e.g. Quintus et al. Reference Quintus, Allen and Ladefoged2016). Divergence in horticultural intensification and management specific to the immediate environment is also apparent: wetland cultivation of Colocasia on O'ahu was matched by extensive dryland field systems on the arid portions of Hawai‘i Island (e.g. Ladefoged et al. Reference Ladefoged, Kirch, Gon, Chadwick, Hartshorn and Vitousek2009). Attempts to control resources can also be seen in Hawaiian fishpond aquaculture. Such management efforts notwithstanding, the pulsing of colonization events into remote Polynesia may also be understood as responses to resource stress, combined with environmental conditions that facilitated eastward sailing (Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Chappell, Gagan and Grove2006). This is underscored by oral histories that tie moments of social tension to long-distance voyages (Firth Reference Firth1967: 24).
The supply problems posed by population growth (Bocquet-Appel Reference Bocquet-Appel2011) and environmental limitations can be related to the apparent florescence of hierarchical forms of social organization across the Pacific during the last two millennia. The emergence of ranked societies relates to demands placed on circumscribed anthropogenic ecologies (Field et al. Reference Field, Ladefoged and Kirch2011). Along with driving colonization events, competition for resources is often framed ethnohistorically as an explanation for political change and consolidation (Kirch Reference Kirch2010: 77–124). Such competition is also implicated in Polynesian and Micronesian monumental architecture. Diverse megalithic traditions such as Yap's stone money (Fitzpatrick Reference Fitzpatrick2008) and Rapa Nui's huge moai statues are most readily interpreted as cases of competitive emulation and display (see also Kolb Reference Kolb2006).
The socioecological trauma of contact between Eurasian and Pacific populations has been exhaustively studied, and we cannot review the extent to which the arrival of Europeans (and their domesticates and commensals, parasites and viruses) radically altered the health and organization of indigenous Pacific societies (e.g. Kirch & Rallu Reference Kirch and Rallu2007). Rather, we emphasize the disruptive ecodynamic processes that accompanied colonization of the Pacific by European colonial interests. The arrival of exotic biota has driven pervasive biophysical cascades, affecting trophic systems, nutrient cycling, hydrology and soils (see D'Antonio et al. Reference D'Antonio, Hughes and Tunison2011; Chynoweth et al. Reference Chynoweth, Litton, Lepczyk, Hess and Cordell2013). In terms of conserving genetic diversity and mitigating the impacts of introduced biota, the Pacific situation is precarious (Jupiter et al. Reference Jupiter, Mangubhai and Kingsford2014).
Pacific Island biophysical systems have been (and continue to be) fundamentally transformed by human arrival and settlement. However, the physiographic organization of Remote Oceania – relatively minute patches separated by relatively massive expanses of ocean – is unmatched in its fragmentation, rendering the Pacific's endemic ecologies highly vulnerable to human colonization.
After colonization, emerging from the intensive management of productive anthropogenic landscapes, demographic growth and the existence of productivity thresholds, this fragmentation also drove the adoption of varied strategies, many of which resulted in highly inequitable political and social systems prior to and after European contact. Such political fragmentation, along with the pervasive nature of ecological changes over the millennia, also poses formidable challenges for restoration and conservation efforts across the Pacific.
MEDITERRANEAN ISLANDS THROUGH DEEP HISTORY
The environmental organization of the Mediterranean results from its unique physiographic and biotic structure, combined with deep historical anthropogenic processes. These have resulted in ecosystems with constituents that evolved under massive selective pressure from human activity.
For the Mediterranean islands, the antiquity of human settlement continues to be a contentious issue complicated by: (1) a hominin dispersal and occupation history that spans a million years or more; and (2) major palaeogeographic changes between glacials and interstadials over this time. Generally accepted models of Mediterranean human–island ecodynamics involve no significant occupation by archaic hominins and only sporadic exploitation by AMHs until the terminal Pleistocene or Early Holocene. Recent finds on Crete of possible Acheulean tools may challenge this (Runnels Reference Runnels2014), but the age and nature of these remain uncertain (Broodbank Reference Broodbank2014). Leppard's (Reference Leppard2014) survey of Pleistocene insular ecodynamics also found little evidence for substantial ecosystem changes potentially associated with colonization by archaic humans. There is little evidence for an anthropogenic influence on Mediterranean island ecosystems before the terminal Pleistocene (Palombo Reference Palombo2008); however, future surveys could reveal evidence for late Pleistocene colonization and occupation that is now largely obscured by rising sea levels since the LGM.
The apparent failure of archaic Homo to permanently settle most Mediterranean islands may be a function of the biogeographic constraints that sea gaps placed on early hominin dispersal. For early AMHs, most Mediterranean islands may have been relatively unattractive due to the comparatively lower productivity of marine waters (declining to the east), including low tidal amplitudes that limit intertidal productivity, and the generally depauperate nature of island terrestrial faunas. These environmental factors, combined with the calorific demands of mobile Upper Palaeolithic groups and the implications of these demands in relation to K (gross scaling of K with area and decreasing latitude) may have limited Upper Palaeolithic occupation (Cherry & Leppard Reference Cherry and Leppard2017). The greater diversity of Mesolithic subsistence strategies (see Sampson Reference Sampson1998) and the more expansive evidence for Mesolithic occupation support this model.
Endemism on Mediterranean islands declined catastrophically across the Pleistocene–Holocene boundary, with an 88.9% extinction rate (Alcover et al. Reference Alcover, Sans and Palmer1998: 916). This is attributed, in part, to the sensitivity of Mediterranean Pleistocene biotas to climatic stress associated with the interstadial transition and surface area loss to sea level rise that affected taxa viability because of the relationship between area and food web complexity (Brose et al. Reference Brose, Ostling, Harrison and Martinez2004). The accelerating impacts of Epipalaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic colonists were also driving forces in these extinctions. These impacts resulted from human hunting, as exemplified by possible mass-kill sites (e.g. Cypriot Aetokremnos; Knapp Reference Knapp2013: 52–59), and indirectly via the introduction of numerous domesticated plants and animals that competed with native biotas (e.g. the very late extinction of cave goats (Myotragus balearicus) on the Balearics; Bover et al. Reference Bover, Valenzuela, Torres, Cooper, Pons and Alcover2016). Some Southwest Asian xeric-tolerant domesticates (e.g. goats (Capra hircus), barley (Hordeum vulgare) and various pulses) carried westward by colonizing farmers between c. 10,000 and 4500 BP were pre-adapted to arid Mediterranean islands. Dependence on a more diverse suite of species circumvented the intrinsic trophic limitations of the island Mediterranean, making even very small and marginal island environments (e.g. Formentera and Pantelleria) viable for human settlement. The prevalence of more aridity-tolerant ovicaprids over cattle (Bos spp.) and pigs at sites on smaller, ecologically liminal islands lends corroborating evidence (Ramís Reference Ramís, Knapp and van Dommelen2014).
Elsewhere, the introduction of domesticated species into island ecosystems has been catastrophic (Chynoweth et al. Reference Chynoweth, Litton, Lepczyk, Hess and Cordell2013). In the Mediterranean, a relative paucity of data makes identifying and quantifying these impacts challenging, although there is a growing number of palynological studies with the time depth needed to help reconstruct ecodynamics throughout the Holocene (e.g. Sadori et al. Reference Sadori, Zanchetta and Giardini2008; Di Rita & Melis Reference Di Rita and Melis2013). Despite the difficulty in identifying basin-wide patterns from local records, a Holocene reorganization of regional vegetation regimes is evident and at least partially anthropogenic. Nonetheless, a single clear signature of Neolithization is hard to grasp. Considering various pathways through which ovicaprids affect insular ecosystems, for example, we might expect that predation on preferred food sources would drive woodland fragmentation (via goat browse) in the short term and exert selective effects on preferred versus non-preferred species over evolutionary time.
These transformations would also affect other aspects of environmental organization (such as biogeochemical systems; e.g. soil nutrient cycling), as well as the trophic neighbours of such species, stimulating ecological cascades and driving evolutionary processes in associated species. The relatively woody morphologies of Mediterranean oaks (Quercus spp.), mastic (Pistacia lentiscus) and juniper (Juniperus phoenicea), with their retention of unpalatable secondary metabolites, may be explained, in part, as adaptions to millennia of selective pressure exerted by the herbivory of not only endemic, but also human-introduced ungulates. Mediterranean island floras have been subject to selective pressure from herbivores since their isolation after the Zanclean Flood, but the radical (and rapid) reorganization of trophic structures during Neolithization may have exerted selective pressure that was unusual in degree, if not in type (see Leppard & Pilaar Birch Reference Leppard, Pilaar Birch, Ghilardi, Fachard, Lespez, Leandri and Bressy-Leandri2016). One way or another, the Late Holocene biotic organization of the Mediterranean is generally disturbance adapted and resilient (Allen Reference Allen2003; Butzer Reference Butzer2005).
Anthropogenic effects influenced both terrestrial and marine ecosystems ranging from coastal foraging to targeting species such as the bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus). Prehistoric impacts of such activities on prey demography may have been significant for some relatively sessile species, but probably minor for migratory species like tuna, although Holocene Atlantic bluefin stocks have declined substantially. Large-scale changes in environmental organization were also not limited to biota. Vegetation clearance and overgrazing associated with agropastoralism from c. 9000 to 4000 BP decreased slope stability and drove soil runoff. To alleviate soil loss and expand space for polycropping, various Mediterranean islanders implemented terracing regimes during the Early to Mid-Holocene (Bevan & Conolly Reference Bevan and Conolly2011). Such systems require intensive management, and episodic abandonment could result in the mass sediment transport that is evident in fluvial sedimentary records (Butzer Reference Butzer2005).
Globally, the Columbian exchange was a watershed in the ecology of islands, but in the Mediterranean – where the societies that initiated such contacts originated – there is much less evidence for such disruptions. Broodbank (Reference Broodbank2013), in fact, traced the origin of many textually recorded ecodynamic relationships to the initial Late Holocene and the aridification of the Sahara. Contact with the Americas and Oceania created significant changes in species composition, including the introduction of the tomato, maize, beans and peppers to the Mediterranean. Such introductions transformed human subsistence patterns and altered biophysical relationships from pollination dynamics to providing new niches for symbionts and parasites, but they did not traumatize already disturbance-adapted biotas in ways comparable to many other islands.
The historical ecology of the Mediterranean exemplifies how humans can, through short-term decision-making, create productive ecosystems in otherwise marginal environments. The deleterious impacts of hunter–gatherer–fishers and especially later Neolithic peoples – although partially mitigated by strategies such as fallowing, manuring and terracing – created productive anthropogenic ecosystems that were relatively resilient in their capacity to tolerate variation. Environmental change, including the gradual and variable establishment of Late Holocene climatic conditions, challenged human social organizations that were reliant on certain subsistence regimes. This suggests an exaggerated sensitivity of anthropogenic island ecologies to changing climate and ocean systems when compared to adjacent continental areas. This has implications beyond the Mediterranean for the maintenance of biodiversity, sustainability and sociopolitical stability.
MARITIME HUNTER–GATHERER–FISHERS ON CALIFORNIA'S CHANNEL ISLANDS
California's Channel Islands, divided into northern and southern groups, were home to Native Americans for at least 13,000 years. Some of the earliest islanders had sophisticated maritime capabilities focused on shellfishing, fishing and the hunting of birds and marine mammals (Erlandson et al. Reference Erlandson, Braje, Rick, Jew, Kennett, Dwyer, Ainis, Vellanoweth and Watts2011). Unlike Pacific, Mediterranean and Caribbean islands occupied by ancient agriculturalists, Channel Islanders never introduced domesticates, save dogs, relying on a mix of marine and terrestrial foods, technological innovations and complex cultural adaptations to sustain large, sedentary populations. Recent Channel Islands research documents a variety of ways that foragers, often assumed to have a relatively light environmental footprint, transformed islands. Archaeological and palaeoecological data reveal patterns of human overexploitation and ancient management, providing insights for understanding and managing island ecosystems today.
The Channel Islands, located between 20 and 98 km off southern California's coast, range between 2.6 and 249 km2 in size. During the LGM, the northern islands (Anacapa, Santa Cruz, Santa Rosa and San Miguel) coalesced into one landmass, Santarosae, separated from the mainland by c. 8 km (Reeder-Myers et al. Reference Reeder-Myers, Erlandson, Muhs and Rick2015). The southern islands (Santa Barbara, San Clemente, San Nicolas and San Clemente) were larger during the LGM but were isolated by sizable water gaps. Isolation created unique island ecosystems and endemic and relict species with relatively impoverished terrestrial biodiversity. Exceptionally productive marine ecosystems supported diverse resources, however, including seaweeds, shellfish, fishes, sea mammals and birds.
Nearshore marine ecosystems were a major focus of Native American subsistence. Mussels (Mytilus californianus), abalone (Haliotis spp.), limpets (Lottia spp.), sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus spp.) and turban snails (Chlorostoma spp.) were especially important, and trans-Holocene studies show decreasing average sizes through time, linked to growing human predation pressure (Erlandson et al. Reference Erlandson, Rick, Braje, Steinburg and Vellanoweth2008, Reference Erlandson, Braje, Rick, Jew, Kennett, Dwyer, Ainis, Vellanoweth and Watts2011). Human depression of high-ranked shellfish species resulted in overexploitation and resource switching to lower-ranked taxa (Braje et al. Reference Braje, Kennett, Erlandson and Culleton2007). Erlandson et al. (Reference Erlandson, Rick, Estes, Graham, Braje, Vellanoweth, Garcelon and Schwemm2005) argued that human depletion of local sea otter (Enhydra lutris) populations may have triggered trophic cascades beginning c. 7500 BP, releasing key shellfish resources and helping sustain viable shellfisheries for millennia (see Braje et al. Reference Braje, Erlandson, Rick, Dayton and Hatch2009). The most dramatic impacts correlate with spikes in human populations and the formation of large coastal villages during the Late Holocene (<3500 BP). Shellfish contributed an increasingly small percentage of dietary protein through time, but the overall intensity of harvest accelerated without evidence of extinctions or other long-term consequences.
Less is known about pre-Columbian human impacts on marine mammals, finfishes and seabirds. Fishing intensified significantly after the development of circular shell fishhooks c. 3500 years ago, and marine mammal hunting appears to have accelerated dramatically c. 1500 BP, roughly when the bow and arrow and plank canoe first appeared. These new technologies allowed islanders greater access to pinniped communities on offshore islets, as well as large pelagic fish.
Today, massive pinniped haul-outs located on or near ancient villages suggest that local distributions and behaviours of these animals have shifted since their release from ancient and historical hunting (Braje et al. Reference Braje, Rick, Erlandson, DeLong, Braje and Rick2011). Guadalupe fur seals (Arctocephalus townsendi) were the focus of native hunting during much of the Holocene (Rick et al. Reference Rick, DeLong, Erlandson, Braje, Jones, Kennett, Wake and Walker2009), with elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) being rare in archaeological sites (Rick et al. Reference Rick, DeLong, Erlandson, Braje, Jones, Arnold, Des Lauriers, Kennett, Vellanoweth and Wake2011). Today, the situation is reversed, with abundant elephant seals and virtually no Guadalupe fur seals. The recent identification of sea mammal bone fragments from 9000–12,000-year-old sites show that elephant seals were hunted by some of the earliest islanders, who may have altered the structure of pinniped populations millennia ago. This suggests that multiple shifts in pinniped communities occurred on the Channel Islands – after initial human arrival, again during the colonial 18th- and 19th-century fur/oil trade and finally as a by-product of modern management and conservation.
The long-term ecodynamics of humans, finfishes and seabirds are more obscure. One clear example of prehistoric human-influenced extinction on the islands comes from a flightless duck (Chendytes lawi) that was driven to extinction on the islands and mainland by c. 2400 BP (Jones et al. Reference Jones, Porcasi, Erlandson, Dallas, Wake and Schwaderer2008). Impacts to ground-nesting bird species were likely caused by the human introduction of dogs and foxes (Urocyon spp.) to the islands starting at least 6000 years ago (Rick Reference Rick, Thompson and Waggoner2013; Hofman et al. Reference Hofman, Rick, Hawkins, Funk, Ralls, Boser, Collins, Coonan, King, Morrison, Newsome, Sillett, Fleischer and Maldonado2015). Preliminary studies also suggest that the average size of some prey fish species was significantly larger in the past than they are today (Braje et al. Reference Braje, Rick, Erlandson, Wolverton and Lyman2012, Reference Braje, Rick, Szpak, Newsome, McCain, Elliot Smith, Glassow and Hamilton2017).
We know less about the importance of terrestrial habitats for Channel Islander diets, but recent palaeobotanical research suggests that humans shaped and managed island landscapes for millennia. Fires occurred on the islands during the late Pleistocene and Holocene, and many of these may have been set by native peoples to expand grassland habitats that were rich in geophytes and other economically important plants (Gill Reference Gill, Jazwa and Perry2013, Reference Gill2015). Anderson et al. (Reference Anderson, Starratt, Brunner Jass and Pinter2010) identified evidence for accelerated island burning during the human population increases of the Late Holocene (c. 3000 BP), which may be related to such landscape management systems.
By the mid-19th century, indigenous communities had been removed from the islands by Spanish colonizers, and the islands converted into commercial ranching, hunting and fishing outposts. Historically, the most dramatic changes swept across the islands with the introduction of numerous exotic herbivores, including horses (Equus spp.), cattle, sheep (Ovis aries), pigs, goats, rabbits and cervids such as elk (Cervus canadensis) and deer that caused widespread devegetation, soil erosion and changes in freshwater hydrology. Other exotic animals were also introduced, including domestic cats, rats and birds (e.g., turkeys (Meleagris spp.), chickens and quails (family: Odontophoridae)). Numerous exotic plants were also introduced, and local populations of pinnipeds and sea otters were devastated by the commercial fur trade. These changes transformed island ecosystems so extensively that it can be difficult to decode the pre-Columbian state and establish appropriate restoration baselines or benchmarks.
CARIBBEAN ISLANDS IN FLUX
The Caribbean has received less archaeological attention with regards to human impacts on island environments, particularly for landscape modification resulting from food production. Amerindian groups settled Trinidad as early as c. 8000 BP (although it was in close proximity or partially connected to the Venezuelan coast in the Early Holocene), and Cuba, Hispaniola and Puerto Rico perhaps as early as c. 6000–5000 BP (Fitzpatrick Reference Fitzpatrick2015), introducing a suite of non-native plants and animals in a process that accelerated beginning c. 2000–1500 BP (Hofman et al. Reference Hofman, Bright, Hoogland and Keegan2008; Giovas et al. Reference Giovas, LeFebvre and Fitzpatrick2012; Mickleburgh & Pagán-Jiménez Reference Mickleburgh and Pagán-Jiménez2012).
If the degree of impact to Caribbean terrestrial environments is still poorly known, research has shown that humans began to effect native terrestrial and marine fauna in biologically impoverished and highly endemic island environments (Fitzpatrick & Keegan Reference Fitzpatrick and Keegan2007). These may have included sloths during the Archaic, whose extinctions seem independent of climatic changes, but not human arrival (Steadman et al. Reference Steadman, Martin, MacPhee, Jull, McDonald, Woods, Iturralde-Vinent and Hodgins2005). Other signs of human impacts involved the extinction or extirpation of reptile, mammal and bird species (Soto-Centeno & Steadman Reference Soto-Centeno and Steadman2015; Steadman & Franklin Reference Steadman and Franklin2015; Steadman et al. Reference Steadman, Albury, Kakuk, Mead, Soto-Centeno, Singleton and Franklin2015). Several Ceramic Age archaeological assemblages show an early emphasis on, and then major decline of, rice rats (family: Cricetidae) and land crabs, with a commensurate increase in mollusc species (Newsom & Wing Reference Newsom and Wing2004: 100, 102–104), suggesting overexploitation of terrestrial fauna and a move towards heavier reliance on marine foods. Larger marine mammals such as the manatee, the Caribbean monk seal (Monachus tropicalis) or migrating cetaceans seem not to have been a focus of prehistoric predation.
Zooarchaeological research in the northern Antilles shows changes in marine predation and consumption patterns, with carnivorous fishes such as groupers dominating earlier phases of occupation compared to herbivorous species such as surgeonfish (family: Acanthuridae) and parrotfish (subfamily: Scarinae). Nearshore taxa also become less dominant as pelagic fishes (e.g. jacks (family: Carangidae), flying fish (family: Exocoetidae) and tuna) increase (Newsom & Wing Reference Newsom and Wing2004: 111–112). There is also a general decline in the mean trophic level of reef fishes with a subsequent increase (or decrease) in the mean trophic level of inshore and pelagic fishes (Wing Reference Wing2001: 112). In one case, the mean size of nearshore (reef) fishes declined between c. 1850–1280 and 1415–560 BP occupations, correlating with increased dependence on smaller fishes such as herrings (family: Clupeidae) and reduced mean trophic level. The shift towards more pelagic species and changes in the sizes of fish suggest that native peoples impacted nearshore environments, which may have resulted in an increased reliance on horticulture and new fishing technologies.
While some Caribbean evidence points to marine overexploitation, other data suggest that groups lived sustainably. Analysing fish assemblages from Anguilla, Carder et al. (Reference Carder, Reitz and Crock2007) found no indication for overfishing over a period of 700–900 years. At a late Ceramic Age site on Nevis, a study of a large mollusc assemblage (n = ≥58,000) showed no signs of overharvest from c. 1200 to 500 BP, despite increased exploitation of some species (Poteate et al. Reference Poteate, Fitzpatrick, Clark and Stone2015). Measurement of >2700 nerites (Nerita tessellata) from this collection showed a significant increase in shell size through time, despite elevated harvest levels (Giovas et al. Reference Giovas, Clark, Fitzpatrick and Stone2013). Additional research is needed in order to examine the effects of native groups on Caribbean ecosystems, but these case studies suggest that even small human populations can affect fish populations and that mollusc harvesting may have compensated for declining fisheries (including sea turtles (superfamily: Chelonioidea)) in some areas.
If the level of impact on Caribbean biota prehistorically is still uncertain in many places, the arrival of Europeans was clearly disastrous to native groups and island ecologies. The ‘Columbian Exchange’ (Crosby Reference Crosby1972) – a transfer of people, pathogens, plants and animals between the Old and New Worlds – led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Amerindians, widespread land clearance for subsistence crops and trade such as coffee, sugarcane and tobacco and the decline or extirpation of numerous endemic species, including sea turtles and the Caribbean monk seal (see Fitzpatrick & Keegan Reference Fitzpatrick and Keegan2007). Competition by European powers for commercial and strategic control accelerated environmental impacts to such a degree that many Caribbean islands are ecological shadows of their pre-Columbian states.
ISLANDS IN THE ANTHROPOCENE
Around the world, archaeological and other records show that human transformation of island ecosystems has a deep history that often began with initial human arrival. In many cases, burning, landscape clearance and the introduction of exotic plants and animals drove significant ecological changes during the early stages of human settlement. Human impacts accelerated as populations increased and economies intensified, often resulting in extinctions, soil erosion and increasingly anthropogenic landscapes.
The scale of human impacts on island ecosystems varied, however, based on many factors (Fig. 2). Hunter–gatherer–fisher colonizations on the Channel Islands and (initially) some Caribbean and Mediterranean islands seem to have left a relatively light footprint, with ecological changes that are often more difficult to discern in archaeological and palaeoecological records. Later settlement of islands by agricultural peoples in the Mediterranean, Caribbean and the remote Pacific resulted in relatively rapid landscape clearance, burning, biotic introductions, extinctions of endemic species and other changes that created anthropogenic island ecosystems that were actively managed by people for millennia.
Focusing on these broad patterns, however, obscures incredible variability in human ecodynamics on islands around the world. Hunter–gatherer–fishers on the Channel Islands introduced dogs, foxes, deer mice and possibly other organisms, burned scrublands to create favourable conditions for grasslands and geophytes for millennia, altered pinniped and shellfish populations and triggered trophic cascades in kelp ecosystems as much as 8000 years ago. Polynesian maritime agriculturalists colonized the Pacific and successfully managed their populations and subsistence strategies on some islands, but were less successful at avoiding ecological disaster on others. The scale of human impacts depended on a number of complex, intersecting variables, from island physiography to human subsistence strategies, population densities, technology, sociopolitical organization and human decision-making (see Kirch Reference Kirch2007). On Californian, Pacific, Caribbean and other islands, however, the impacts of indigenous peoples pale in comparison to those associated with historical Euro–American and Asian settlement and the introduction of many more exotic plant and animal species. This is the one pattern that may be universal – the rapid and transformative effects of colonial expansion and occupation. Whether islands were small or large, continental or oceanic, isolated or not, their colonization by Europeans and other groups and their integration into global economic systems resulted in the introduction of no-analogue ecological systems and devastatingly swift changes to island habitats.
Ultimately, this differential timing and scale of the human modification of island ecosystems poses one of the central challenges of historical ecology. Understanding long-term processes of human–island interactions can help reconstruct the evolution of island ecosystems, but creates a dilemma for conservation scientists: what are the preferred temporal and spatial baselines for restoration and management? Like all ecological communities, islands have been (and are) in a nearly constant state of flux (Graham Reference Graham1988), although anthropogenic climate change is now accelerating the pace of change. For some, we should establish baselines at a pre-human colonization temporal scale; for others pre-European colonialization; and for others something in between. If the target time period is too shallow, long-term environmental disturbances may be overlooked, and we risk restoring ecosystems to already-degraded and no-analogue states. If the temporal target is too old, benchmarks may be unobtainable within current or future ecological states (Landres Reference Landres1992).
Archaeological perspectives offer multi-scalar records of island ecological changes and view humans as integral to these processes. If conservation biology is to succeed over the longue durée, deep historical (archaeological) data offer critical records of long-term change and human ecodynamics. Historical data can identify a range of ecological states that once existed and provide multiple benchmarks to help guide conservation efforts. Deciding which temporal baselines, if any, are most appropriate is inherently political, driven by assessments of desired future conditions. We cannot rewind the clock to past ecological states, but deep historical perspectives may help us to create more practical and successful management plans. Our review suggests that there is no single or global solution, but that practical restoration choices will best be made by considering the implications of the deep time perspective for rebuilding ecosystems and resiliency in individual islands or archipelagos.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank the Foundation for Environmental Conservation for inviting this review, and John Cherry, Tim Rieth, the editors and three reviewers for their comments on earlier drafts.