Resilience and the Cultural Landscape 2012
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9781139107778.013
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The sugar-cane landscape of the Caribbean islands: resilience, adaptation and transformation of the plantation social–ecological system

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The Taíno people, who first arrived in Jamaica in ~650 CE, used maize, a C4 plant, which may have contributed to the first gradual increase in δ 13 C (Santos et al 2013;Mickleburgh and Pagan-Jimenez 2012). Christopher Columbus subsequently introduced sugarcane, another C4 plant, to the Caribbean in the early 16 th century (Found and Berbés-Blázquez 2012), which would have contributed further to the rise in δ 13 C observed in the HOM core. Notably, there is a sugarcane plantation ~3 km north of HOM cave, thus foraging bats may consume insects supported by a C4-influenced diet.…”
Section: Stable Isotopes and Dietary Trendsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Taíno people, who first arrived in Jamaica in ~650 CE, used maize, a C4 plant, which may have contributed to the first gradual increase in δ 13 C (Santos et al 2013;Mickleburgh and Pagan-Jimenez 2012). Christopher Columbus subsequently introduced sugarcane, another C4 plant, to the Caribbean in the early 16 th century (Found and Berbés-Blázquez 2012), which would have contributed further to the rise in δ 13 C observed in the HOM core. Notably, there is a sugarcane plantation ~3 km north of HOM cave, thus foraging bats may consume insects supported by a C4-influenced diet.…”
Section: Stable Isotopes and Dietary Trendsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Les chercheurs montrent qu'il n'y aurait rien d'inéluctable dans la succession des quatre phases du cycle adaptatif. Plusieurs phases peuvent exister de manière simultanée et la phase d'effondrement pourrait être évitée (voir, par exemple, l'étude de la résilience du paysage né de l'exploitation de la canne à sucre dans les caraïbes : Found & Berbès-Blàzquez, 2012).…”
Section: Le Cadre Conceptuel De La Résilience éCologiqueunclassified