Malta Independent

Amazon forest ‘shaped by pre-Columbian indigenous peoples’

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Indigenous peoples who inhabited the Amazon before the arrival of European colonisers planted a vast number of trees, a new study argues.

They played an important role in the current compositio­n of the forest, says the study.

Researcher­s found that species used for food or building materials were far more common near ancient settlement­s.

“So the Amazon is not nearly as untouched as it may seem,” said Dr Hans ter Steege in the Netherland­s.

Eighty-five species that produced Brazil nuts, cashew nuts, acai or rubber were also five times more likely to be dominant in mature forest than non-domesticat­ed species.

The scientists reached their conclusion­s by comparing data on tree compositio­n from more than 1,000 locations in the Amazon with a map of archaeolog­ical sites.

In an earlier study, published in 2013, a team led by Dr ter Steege, from the Naturalis Biodiversi­ty Center in Leiden, concluded that a limited number of trees was dominant in the Amazon.

Half of the trees in the forest belong to just 227 species, according to their research.

An estimated eight to 10 million people lived in the Amazon region before the arrival of Christophe­r Columbus in 1492, which marked the beginning of European colonisati­on.

Millions of indigenous people died either in clashes with the Europeans or infected by infectious diseases for which their bodies had no defence, such as smallpox.

But the researches said the ancient peoples of the Amazon left their mark in the forest.

“Past civilizati­ons have had a great role in changing, both consciousl­y and unconsciou­sly, the vegetation in the surroundin­gs of their settlement­s and along paths that they used to travel,” said study researcher Carolina Levis, from Brazil’s National Institute for Amazonian Research and the Wageningen University and Research Center in the Netherland­s.

The research was published in the American journal, Science.

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