The ancient Maya and the modern forest

Author:

Brokaw Nicholas1ORCID,Ward Sheila E.2ORCID,Beach Timothy3ORCID,Luzzadder‐Beach Sheryl3ORCID,Walling Stanley4ORCID,Cortes‐Rincon Marisol5,Valdez Fred6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Science University of Puerto Rico‐Río Piedras San Juan Puerto Rico

2. Urbanización Villa Nevárez San Juan Puerto Rico

3. Department of Geography and the Environment University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

4. Department of Social Sciences Community College of Philadelphia Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Anthropology California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt; Behavioral and Social Science Building 506 Arcata California USA

6. Department of Anthropology University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractThe land use of the ancient Maya strongly affected the environment of the previously forested Maya Lowlands. A forest grew back after the Maya “collapse”, some 1100 years ago. Two activities of the ancient Maya could have had widespread effects on the tree species composition of the regrown, modern forest. First, in areas with topographic relief Maya agriculture caused substantial soil erosion and accumulation, changing soil depth and character. Soil character is associated with differential distributions and abundances of many tree species in the Maya Lowlands. To the extent that soil character on the modern landscape differs from that on the pre‐Maya landscape, regrown forests on the modern landscape would differ from pre‐Maya forests. Second, the ancient Maya cleared much forest but likely also cultivated or favored certain tree species in home gardens, regenerating farm plots, and patches of older growth. A rigorous study suggests that descendants of favored tree species persist in elevated abundance in some areas of the modern forest but not in other areas. After c. 1100 years of regrowth in some places, the legacy of the ancient Maya in the modern forest likely ranges from strong to absent across the varied landscape of the Lowlands. An ancient mosaic of forest patches would have provided a species‐rich, multiple‐point source for forest regrowth. Such a mosaic is lacking in modern deforested tropical landscapes, likely inhibiting recovery of a species‐rich forest.

Funder

Pew Charitable Trusts

Directorate for Biological Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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