banner
Peters, Charles M.

Observations on Maya subsistance and the ecology of a tropical tree. Charles M. Peters. - Estados Unidos-US : Society for American Archaeology, 1983. - páginas 610-615: ilustraciones blanco y negro - Trimestral - vol.48; no. 3 (Jul.1983) - no.3 . - Soociety for American Archaeology. .

The results from an autecological study of the growth, reproduction, and population dynamicas of Brosimum alicastrum (ramón) in southern Mexico are applied to the controversy surrounding the use of this species in Maya subsistence practice. The frequent occurrence of B. alicastrum near ruins is explained by its competitive advantage on shallow limestone soils coupled with a continual input of bat dispersed seed. Populations of the tree at Tikal are then compared with other naturally occurring populations as an example of how a detailed ecological analysis may furnish valuable insight into the historical use of a plant species. The Tikal populations are shown to be atypical in terms of phenology, productivity and breeding systems suggesting that some form of artificial selection may have been practiced by the Maya.

ARQUEOLOGIA CULTURA MAYA

MUSEO NACIONAL DE ETNOGRAFÍA Y FOLKLORE        
La Paz N° 916 Calle Ingavi (591-2) 2408640- 2406030 Fax (591-2) 2406642
E-mail: musef@musef.org.bo   Casilla postal 5817   www.musef.org.bo
Sucre 74 calle España (591-4) 6455293
Pie de página
© Copyright 2023 · MUSEF