Publications by authors named "Torben Rick"

People have influenced Earth's biodiversity for millennia, including numerous introductions of domestic and wild species to islands. Here, we explore the origins and ecology of the Santa Catalina Island ground squirrel (SCIGS; ), one of only five endemic terrestrial mammals found on California's Santa Catalina Island. We synthesized all records of archaeological/palaeontological SCIGS, conducted radiocarbon dating and stable isotope analysis of the potentially earliest SCIGS remains and performed genetic analysis of modern SCIGS.

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Atlantic sturgeon ( ssp. ) has been a food resource in North America for millennia. However, industrial-scale fishing activities following the establishment of European colonies led to multiple collapses of sturgeon stocks, driving populations such as those in the Chesapeake area close to extinction.

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Historical ecology has revolutionized our understanding of fisheries and cultural landscapes, demonstrating the value of historical data for evaluating the past, present, and future of Earth's ecosystems. Despite several important studies, Indigenous fisheries generally receive less attention from scholars and managers than the 17th-20th century capitalist commercial fisheries that decimated many keystone species, including oysters. We investigate Indigenous oyster harvest through time in North America and Australia, placing these data in the context of sea level histories and historical catch records.

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Article Synopsis
  • Archaeological evidence indicates that by 10,000 BCE, human societies were already engaged in transformative land use practices like burning, hunting, and cultivation, shaping ecological landscapes extensively.
  • Contrary to the belief that human impact on nature is a recent phenomenon, research shows that nearly 75% of Earth's land was inhabited and influenced by humans 12,000 years ago, with significant effects on temperate and tropical woodlands.
  • The current biodiversity crisis is linked more to the historical use of landscapes rather than the loss of untouched wildlands, highlighting the need to acknowledge the long-standing cultural ties between humans and biodiversity to address these environmental challenges.
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Genetic analyses are an important contribution to wildlife reintroductions, particularly in the modern context of extirpations and ecological destruction. To address the complex historical ecology of the sea otter () and its failed 1970s reintroduction to coastal Oregon, we compared mitochondrial genomes of pre-extirpation Oregon sea otters to extant and historical populations across the range. We sequenced, to our knowledge, the first complete ancient mitogenomes from archaeological Oregon sea otter dentine and historical sea otter dental calculus.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Recent research over the last decade has revealed important insights into how early peoples in the Americas might have relied on coastal resources, particularly those living during the terminal Pleistocene on the Pacific Coast.
  • - The archaeological site CA-SRI-26 on Santa Rosa Island, dating back around 11,700 years, has provided valuable artifacts and evidence of early Paleoindian technologies and diets, despite some of it being eroded away.
  • - Findings from CA-SRI-26 indicate a diverse diet including waterfowl, fish, and marine mammals, suggesting a brief occupation during the wetter winter months and highlighting the cultural connections to the wider Western Stemmed Tradition seen in other Paleocoastal sites across North America.
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An accurate understanding of biodiversity of the past is critical for contextualizing biodiversity patterns and trends in the present. Emerging techniques are refining our ability to decipher otherwise cryptic human-mediated species translocations across the Quaternary, yet these techniques are often used in isolation, rather than part of an interdisciplinary hypothesis-testing toolkit, limiting their scope and application. Here we illustrate the use of such an integrative approach and report the occurrence of North America's largest terrestrial mammalian carnivore, the short-faced bear, Arctodus simus, from Daisy Cave (CA-SMI-261), an important early human occupation site on the California Channel Islands.

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The eastern oyster () is an important proxy for examining historical trajectories of coastal ecosystems. Measurement of ~40,000 oyster shells from archaeological sites along the Atlantic Coast of the United States provides a long-term record of oyster abundance and size. The data demonstrate increases in oyster size across time and a nonrandom pattern in their distributions across sites.

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We live in an age characterized by increasing environmental, social, economic, and political uncertainty. Human societies face significant challenges, ranging from climate change to food security, biodiversity declines and extinction, and political instability. In response, scientists, policy makers, and the general public are seeking new interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary approaches to evaluate and identify meaningful solutions to these global challenges.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding past climate changes is crucial for validating current climate models, with archaeological sites acting as valuable data sources for ecological and paleoenvironmental research.
  • Many archaeological sites have been damaged or lost, highlighting the importance of legacy collections, which hold information that could otherwise be gone, but come with challenges like poor records and insufficient public awareness.
  • The text emphasizes the need for better practices in utilizing these collections, ethical considerations related to cultural resource management, and the importance of Indigenous involvement in the process.
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Environmentally transformative human use of land accelerated with the emergence of agriculture, but the extent, trajectory, and implications of these early changes are not well understood. An empirical global assessment of land use from 10,000 years before the present (yr B.P.

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This article provides a review of recent anthropological, archeological, geographical, and sociological research on anthropogenic drivers of climate change, with a particular focus on drivers of carbon emissions, mitigation and adaptation. The four disciplines emphasize cultural, economic, geographic, historical, political, and social-structural factors to be important drivers of and responses to climate change. Each of these disciplines has unique perspectives and makes noteworthy contributions to our shared understanding of anthropogenic drivers, but they also complement one another and contribute to integrated, multidisciplinary frameworks.

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Research on human-environment interactions that informs ecological practices and guides conservation and restoration has become increasingly interdisciplinary over the last few decades. Fueled in part by the debate over defining a start date for the Anthropocene, historical disciplines like archeology, paleontology, geology, and history are playing an important role in understanding long-term anthropogenic impacts on the planet. Pleistocene overkill, the notion that humans overhunted megafauna near the end of the Pleistocene in the Americas, Australia, and beyond, is used as prime example of the impact that humans can have on the planet.

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Article Synopsis
  • The research focuses on how early humans in the Americas interacted with coastal resources, specifically marine mammals, using collagen fingerprinting techniques on bone fragments from ancient sites in California's Channel Islands.
  • Findings reveal that these early Paleo-Coastal communities hunted various marine mammals, including northern elephant seals, eared seals, and sea otters, much earlier than previously understood.
  • The study suggests that human activities influenced marine mammal populations long before significant impacts from fur and oil trades, and the current populations on the channel islands may reflect their presence before human arrival.
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Historical ecology provides information needed to understand contemporary conditions and make science-based resource management decisions. Gaps in historical records, however, can limit inquiries and inference. Unfortunately, the patchiness of data that poses challenges for today's historical ecologist may be similarly problematic for those in the future seeking to understand what are currently present-day conditions and trends, in part because of societal underinvestment in systematic collection and curation.

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The intensive commercial exploitation of California sheephead () has become a complex, multimillion-dollar industry. The fishery is of concern because of high harvest levels and potential indirect impacts of sheephead removals on the structure and function of kelp forest ecosystems. California sheephead are protogynous hermaphrodites that, as predators of sea urchins and other invertebrates, are critical components of kelp forest ecosystems in the northeast Pacific.

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Scientific collections are crucial to understanding the biological and cultural diversity of the Earth. Anthropological collections document the human experience and the interactions between people, ecosystems, and organisms. Unfortunately, anthropological collections are often poorly known by the public and face a variety of threats to their permanent care and conservation.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The eastern oyster populations in Chesapeake Bay have dramatically decreased, complicating efforts for their restoration and conservation.
  • * Research on 3,500 years of oyster harvest data shows that Native American fishing practices were sustainable, suggesting valuable insights for current fisheries management amidst environmental changes.
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The evolutionary mechanisms generating the tremendous biodiversity of islands have long fascinated evolutionary biologists. Genetic drift and divergent selection are predicted to be strong on islands and both could drive population divergence and speciation. Alternatively, strong genetic drift may preclude adaptation.

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There is growing consensus that we have entered the Anthropocene, a geologic epoch characterized by human domination of the ecosystems of the Earth. With the future uncertain, we are faced with understanding how global biodiversity will respond to anthropogenic perturbations. The archaeological record provides perspective on human-environment relations through time and across space.

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Island endemics are typically differentiated from their mainland progenitors in behavior, morphology, and genetics, often resulting from long-term evolutionary change. To examine mechanisms for the origins of island endemism, we present a phylogeographic analysis of whole mitochondrial genomes from the endangered island fox (Urocyon littoralis), endemic to California's Channel Islands, and mainland gray foxes (U. cinereoargenteus).

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Human-environmental relationships have long been of interest to a variety of scientists, including ecologists, biologists, anthropologists, and many others. In anthropology, this interest was especially prevalent among cultural ecologists of the 1970s and earlier, who tended to explain culture as the result of techno-environmental constraints. More recently researchers have used historical ecology, an approach that focuses on the long-term dialectical relationship between humans and their environments, as well as long-term prehuman ecological datasets.

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