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Zooarchaeological perspectives in the framework of the Anthropocene: contributions to ecological, environmental and conservation studies from South America

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Samec,  Celeste Tamara
isoTROPIC Independent Research Group, Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Mignino, J., López, J. M., & Samec, C. T. (2024). Zooarchaeological perspectives in the framework of the Anthropocene: contributions to ecological, environmental and conservation studies from South America. The Holocene, 09596836241231456. doi:10.1177/09596836241231456.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000E-AF9E-C
Abstract
This special volume considers major recent changes in southern South American animal communities. Eleven papers consider megafauna, pinnipeds, marine mammals, small terrestrial mammals and birds and are grouped under four sub-headings: (1) Isotopic insights into guanaco populations; (2) Historical sources and marine ecosystem change; (3) Changes in small mammal communities and human impacts; and (4) megafaunal extinction, domestication, avifauna and recent interactions with humans. Although some of these contributions include changes that occurred earlier in the Holocene, many highlight a current decrease in the taxonomic diversity of communities and ecosystems in different environments, which are likely to have been caused by modern human activities. The Anthropocene concept is seen as providing a useful framework for understanding and mitigation of such adverse human impacts.