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2012 | 81 | 4 |

Tytuł artykułu

Wild food plants of Remote Oceania

Autorzy

Treść / Zawartość

Warianty tytułu

Języki publikacji

EN

Abstrakty

EN

Słowa kluczowe

Wydawca

-

Rocznik

Tom

81

Numer

4

Opis fizyczny

p.371-380,fig.,ref.

Twórcy

  • Botanical Research Institute of Texas, 1700 University Drive, Fort Worth, Texas 76107, USA
  • Department of Botany, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, USA
  • Environmental Studies Program, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas 76107, USA

Bibliografia

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  • 2. Winter K, McClatchey W. The quantum co-evolution unit: an example of ‘awa (kava-piper methysticum G. Foster) in Hawaiian culture. Econ Bot. 2009;63(4):353–362. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12231-009-9089-0
  • 3. Fehr WR. Principles of cultivar development. Theory and technique. Ames IA: Macmillan; 1991. (vol 1).
  • 4. Anderson E. Plants, man and life. Boston MA: Little, Brown; 1952.
  • 5. Sauer CO. Agricultural origins and dispersals. New York NY: American Geographical Society; 1952.
  • 6. Bettinger RL. Hunter-gatherers: archaeological and evolutionary theory. New York NY: Plenum Press; 1991.
  • 7. Huss-Ashmore R, Johnston SL. Wild plants as cultural adaptations to food stress. In: Etkin N, editor. Eating on the wild side: the pharmacologic, ecologic and social implications of using noncultigens. Tucson AZ: University of Arizona Press; 1994. p. 62–82.
  • 8.Henderson CP, R HI. A guide to the useful plants of Solomon Islands. Honiara: Ministry of Agriculture and Lands; 1988.
  • 9. Cox PA. Wild plants as food and medicine in Polynesia. In: Etkin N, editor. Eating on the wild side: the pharmacologic, ecologic and social implications of using noncultigens. Tucson AZ: University of Arizona Press; 1994. p. 102–113.
  • 10. Paull RE, Tang CS, Gross K, Uruu G. The nature of the taro acridity factor. Postharvest Biol Tec. 1999;16(1):71–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0925-5214(98)00099-4
  • 11. Abbott IA. La’au Hawai’i: traditional Hawaiian uses of plants. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press; 1992.
  • 12. MacArthur RH, Wilson EO. The theory of island biogeography. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2001. (Monographs in Population Biology; vol 1).
  • 13. Green RC. Near and remote Oceania: disestablishing “Melanesia” in culture history. In: Bulmer R, Pawley A, editors. Man and a half: essays in Pacific anthropology and ethnobiology in honour of Ralph Bulmer. Auckland: Polynesian Society; 1991. p. 491–502. (Memoirs of the Polynesian Society).
  • 14. Kayser M. The human genetic history of Oceania: near and remote views of dispersal. Curr Biol. 2010;20(4):R194–R201. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2009.12.004
  • 15. Oskarsson MCR, Klutsch CFC, Boonyaprakob U, Wilton A, Tanabe Y, Savolainen P. Mitochondrial DNA data indicate an introduction through Mainland Southeast Asia for Australian dingoes and Polynesian domestic dogs. Proc R Soc B. 2011;279(1730):967–974. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2011.1395
  • 16. Harris DR, Bellwood P. The origins and spread of agriculture in the Indo-Pacific region: gradualism and diffusion or revolution and colonization. In: The origins and spread of agriculture and pastoralism in Eurasia. London: University College London Press; 1996. p. 465–498.
  • 17. Blust RA. The Austronesian languages. Canberra: Australian National University Press; 2009.
  • 18. Goff J, McFadgen BG, Chague-Goff C, Nichol SL. Palaeotsunamis and their influence on Polynesian settlement. Holocene. 2012;22(9):1067–1069. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959683612437873
  • 19. Wilmshurst JM, Hunt TL, Lipo CP, Anderson AJ. High-precision radiocarbon dating shows recent and rapid initial human colonization of East Polynesia. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2010;108(5):1815–1820. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1015876108
  • 20. Gray RD, Drummond AJ, Greenhill SJ. Language phylogenies reveal expansion pulses and pauses in pacific settlement. Science. 2009;323(5913):479–483. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1166858
  • 21. Matisoo-Smith E. Origins and dispersals of Pacific peoples: evidence from mtDNA phylogenies of the Pacific rat. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2004;101(24):9167–9172. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0403120101
  • 22. McConkey KR, Meehan HJ, Drake DR. Seed dispersal by Pacific pigeons (Ducula pacifica) in Tonga, Western Polynesia. Emu. 2004;104(4):369–376. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/MU03060
  • 23. Cox PA, Elmqvist T, Pierson ED, Rainey WE. Flying foxes as strong interactors in South Pacific island ecosystems: a conservation hypothesis. Conserv Biol. 1991;5(4):448–454. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1739.1991.tb00351.x
  • 24. Bellwood P. A hypothesis for Austronesian origins. Asian Persp. 1988;26(1):107–117.
  • 25. Oppenheimer S. The “express train from Taiwan to Polynesia”: on the congruence of proxy lines of evidence. World Archaeol. 2004;36(4):591–600. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0043824042000303773
  • 26. Jennings JD. The prehistory of Polynesia. Canberra: Australian National University Press; 1979.
  • 27. Vésteinsson O, McGovern TH, Keller C. Enduring impacts: social and environmental aspects of Viking age settlement in Iceland and Greenland. Arch Island. 2002;2:98–136.
  • 28. Burley D, Weisler MI, Zhao JX. High precision U/Th dating of first polynesian settlement. PLoS One. 2012;7(11):e48769. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048769
  • 29. Yen DE. Polynesian cultigens and cultivars: the question of origin. In: Cox PA, Banack SA, editors. Plants, islands, and Polynesians: an introduction to Polynesian ethnobotany. Portland OR: Dioscorides Press; 1991. p. 67–96.
  • 30. Kirch PV. A shark going inland is my chief: the island civilization of ancient Hawai’i. Berkeley: University of California Press; 2012.
  • 31. Barrau J. Les plantes alimentaires de l’Océanie, origines, distribution et usages. An Musée Col Marseille. 1962;7:3–9.
  • 32. Guppy HB. Observations of a naturalist in the Pacific between 1896 and 1899: plant-dispersal. London: Macmillan; 1906. (vol 2).
  • 33. Yen DE. Subsistence to commerce in Pacific agriculture: some four thousand years of plant exchange. In: Predergast HDV, Etkin NL, Harris DR, Houghton PJ, editors. Plants for food and medicine. Kew: Royal Botanic Gardens; 1998. p. 161–183.
  • 34. Evans B. Ethnobotanical classification. In: Ross M, Pawley A, Osmond M, editors. The lexicon of Proto Oceanic: the culture and environment of ancestral Oceanic society. Plants. Canberra: Australian National University Press; 2010. p. 53–84. (vol 3).
  • 35. Ross M, Pawley A, Osmond M, editors. The lexicon of Proto Oceanic: the culture and environment of ancestral Oceanic society. Plants. Canberra: Australian National University Press; 2010. (vol 3).
  • 36. Jansen T, Sirikolo MQ. Petanigaki ta Siniqa ni Lauru. Honiara: Kastom Garden Association; 2010.
  • 37. Pollock NJ. These roots remain: food habits in islands of the Central and Eastern Pacific since western contact. Laie: University of Hawaii Press; 1992.
  • 38. Barrau J. Witnesses of the past: notes on some food plants of Oceania. Ethnology. 1965;4(3):282. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3772988
  • 39. Ross M. Introducing Proto Oceanic plant names. In: Ross M, Pawley A, Osmond M, editors. The lexicon of Proto Oceanic: the culture and environment of ancestral Oceanic society. Plants. Canberra: Australian National University Press; 2010. p. 25–52. (vol 3).
  • 40. McClatchey W. Ethnobiology – basic methods used to document dynamic relationships between peoples, biota and environments, and ways in which this knowledge is represented in languages. In: Thieberger N, editor. The Oxford handbook of linguistic fieldwork. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2011. p. 281–297.
  • 41. Winter K, McClatchey W. Quantifying evolution of cultural interactions with plants: implications for managing diversity for resilience in social-ecological systems. Func Ecosyst Commun. 2008;2(1 special issue):1–10.
  • 42. Mcclatchey W, Thaman R, Vodonaivalu S. A preliminary checklist of the flora of Rotuma with Rotuman names. Pac Sci. 2000;54:345–363.
  • 43. Verheij EWM, Coronel RE. Edible fruits and nuts. In: Faridah Hanum I, van der Maesen LJG, editors. PROSEA: plant resources of South-East Asia. Wageningen: Pudoc; 1991. (vol 2).
  • 44. Whistler WA. Polynesian plant introductions. In: Cox PA, Banack SA, editors. Plants, islands, and Polynesians: an introduction to Polynesian ethnobotany. Portland OR: Dioscorides Press; 1991. p. 41–66.
  • 45. Powell JM. Ethnobotany. In: Paijmans K, editor. New Guinea vegetation. Amsterdam: Elsevier; 1976. p. 106–183.
  • 46. Steele OC. Natural and anthropogenic biogeography of mangroves in the Southwest Pacific [PhD thesis]. Honolulu: University of Hawaii; 2006.
  • 47. Fuller R. Fungi and Polynesia: New Zealand and Cook Island Maori ethnomycology [PhD thesis]. Honolulu: University of Hawaii; 2009.
  • 48. Etkin N. Pharmacologic implications of “wild” plants in Hausa diet. In: Etkin N, editor. Eating on the wild side: the pharmacologic, ecologic and social implications of using noncultigens. Tucson AZ: University of Arizona Press; 1994. p. 85–101.
  • 49. N’yeurt A, South G. Biodiversity and biogeography of benthic marine algae in the southwest Pacific, with specific reference to Rotuma and Fiji. Pac Sci. 1997;51(1):18–28.
  • 50. Abbott IA. Polynesian uses of seaweed. In: Cox PA, Banack SA, editors. Plants, islands, and Polynesians: an introduction to Polynesian ethnobotany. Portland OR: Dioscorides Press; 1991. p. 135–146.
  • 51. Conte E, Payri C. Present day consumption of edible algae in French Polynesia: a study of the survival of pre-European practices. J Polyn Soc. 2006;115(1):77.
  • 52. Merlin M, Capelle A, Keene T, Juvik J, Maragos J. Keinikkam Im Melan Aelon Kein. Plants and environments of the Marshall Islands. Honolulu: East-West Center; 1994.
  • 53. National Biodiversity Team of the Republic of the Marshall Islands. The Marshall Islands: living atolls amidst the living sea. Santa Clara: St. Hildegard Publisher; 2000.
  • 54. Cuddihy LW, Stone CP. Alteration of native Hawaiian vegetation: effects of humans, their activities and introductions. Honolulu: University of Hawaii; 1990.
  • 55. Handy ESC, Handy EG, Pukui MK. Native planters in old Hawaii: their life, lore, and environment. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press; 1972.
  • 56. Crowe A. Native edible plants of New Zealand. Auckland: Hodder & Stoughton; 1990.
  • 57. Vavilov NI. Origin and geography of cultivated plants. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.

Typ dokumentu

Bibliografia

Identyfikatory

Identyfikator YADDA

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