2017
DOI: 10.5751/es-09073-220129
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Assessing temporal couplings in social–ecological island systems: historical deforestation and soil loss on Mauritius (Indian Ocean)

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Cited by 29 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Mauritius is therefore an ideal location to explore the role of humans in extinction events, because it is a rare case of an island where human impact on ecosystems and written historical records commence simultaneously (Vaughan & Wiehe , Brouard , Grove , Moree , Grihault , Cheke & Hume , Floore & Jayasena , Norder et al . ).…”
Section: Radiocarbon (14c) Dates Of Bulk Sediment Samples From Mare Tmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Mauritius is therefore an ideal location to explore the role of humans in extinction events, because it is a rare case of an island where human impact on ecosystems and written historical records commence simultaneously (Vaughan & Wiehe , Brouard , Grove , Moree , Grihault , Cheke & Hume , Floore & Jayasena , Norder et al . ).…”
Section: Radiocarbon (14c) Dates Of Bulk Sediment Samples From Mare Tmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The second fire zone, between ca 1787 and 1833, commences during the latter stages of the French governance with the expansion of sugar cane agriculture, and includes the arrival of the British and the industrialization of agriculture (Norder et al . ). During much of the British governance fire activity remained low.…”
Section: Radiocarbon (14c) Dates Of Bulk Sediment Samples From Mare Tmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…He observed that in several places locally grown food crops were replaced with export crops such as sugar cane. The environmental legacies of the sugar cane plantation economies that were operational in Humboldt's time are now becoming visible (Norder et al., ), but Humboldt already saw them emerging. For example, he noted the negative consequences of deforestation and irrigation on soil loss and lowering of water‐tables.…”
Section: Connecting Environmental and Societal Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a return, money flows in the opposite direction from the importing country to the exporting country. Through trade, an importing country substitutes these resources that they would otherwise need to consume from their own resources (Norder et al 2017). Thus, along with the flow of physical products and money, the environmental assets consumed in production travel from the exporting country to the importing country and can be thought of as being substituted from the importing country's resources.…”
Section: Trade Viewed Through the Telecoupling Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%