Cultural transmission and ecological opportunity jointly shaped global patterns of reliance on agriculture

dc.contributor.authorVilela, Bruno
dc.contributor.authorFristoe, Trevor
dc.contributor.authorTuff, Ty
dc.contributor.authorKavanagh, Patrick H.
dc.contributor.authorHaynie, Hannah J.
dc.contributor.authorGray, Russell D.
dc.contributor.authorGavin, Michael C.
dc.contributor.authorBotero, Carlos A.
dc.date.accessioned2021-02-15T08:15:23Z
dc.date.available2021-02-15T08:15:23Z
dc.date.issued2020eng
dc.description.abstractThe evolution of agriculture improved food security and enabled significant increases in the size and complexity of human groups. Despite these positive effects, some societies never adopted these practices, became only partially reliant on them, or even reverted to foraging after temporarily adopting them. Given the critical importance of climate and biotic interactions for modern agriculture, it seems likely that ecological conditions could have played a major role in determining the degree to which different societies adopted farming. However, this seemingly simple proposition has been surprisingly difficult to prove and is currently controversial. Here, we investigate how recent agricultural practices relate both to contemporary ecological opportunities and the suitability of local environments for the first species domesticated by humans. Leveraging a globally distributed dataset on 1,291 traditional societies, we show that after accounting for the effects of cultural transmission and more current ecological opportunities, levels of reliance on farming continue to be predicted by the opportunities local ecologies provided to the first human domesticates even after centuries of cultural evolution. Based on the details of our models, we conclude that ecology likely helped shape the geography of agriculture by biasing both human movement and the human-assisted dispersal of domesticates.eng
dc.description.versionpublishedeng
dc.identifier.doi10.1017/ehs.2020.55eng
dc.identifier.ppn1748272926
dc.identifier.urihttps://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/52825
dc.language.isoengeng
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 International
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjectBiogeography of human agriculture, cultural evolution, comparative studies of human culture, spread of human cultureeng
dc.subject.ddc570eng
dc.titleCultural transmission and ecological opportunity jointly shaped global patterns of reliance on agricultureeng
dc.typeJOURNAL_ARTICLEeng
dspace.entity.typePublication
kops.citation.bibtex
@article{Vilela2020Cultu-52825,
  year={2020},
  doi={10.1017/ehs.2020.55},
  title={Cultural transmission and ecological opportunity jointly shaped global patterns of reliance on agriculture},
  volume={2},
  journal={Evolutionary Human Sciences},
  author={Vilela, Bruno and Fristoe, Trevor and Tuff, Ty and Kavanagh, Patrick H. and Haynie, Hannah J. and Gray, Russell D. and Gavin, Michael C. and Botero, Carlos A.},
  note={Article Number: e53}
}
kops.citation.iso690VILELA, Bruno, Trevor FRISTOE, Ty TUFF, Patrick H. KAVANAGH, Hannah J. HAYNIE, Russell D. GRAY, Michael C. GAVIN, Carlos A. BOTERO, 2020. Cultural transmission and ecological opportunity jointly shaped global patterns of reliance on agriculture. In: Evolutionary Human Sciences. Cambridge University Press. 2020, 2, e53. eISSN 2513-843X. Available under: doi: 10.1017/ehs.2020.55deu
kops.citation.iso690VILELA, Bruno, Trevor FRISTOE, Ty TUFF, Patrick H. KAVANAGH, Hannah J. HAYNIE, Russell D. GRAY, Michael C. GAVIN, Carlos A. BOTERO, 2020. Cultural transmission and ecological opportunity jointly shaped global patterns of reliance on agriculture. In: Evolutionary Human Sciences. Cambridge University Press. 2020, 2, e53. eISSN 2513-843X. Available under: doi: 10.1017/ehs.2020.55eng
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