Incipient Aquaculture in Prehistoric California? Long-term productivity and sustainability vs. immediate returns for the harvest of marine invertebrates

TitleIncipient Aquaculture in Prehistoric California? Long-term productivity and sustainability vs. immediate returns for the harvest of marine invertebrates
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsWhitaker, AR
JournalJournal of Archaeological Sciences
Volume35
Issue4
Pagination1114-1123
KeywordsConservation, Mytilus californianus, Optimal foraging theory, Resource depression
Abstract

California archaeologists have proposed two alternative methods for harvesting mussels—“stripping” and “plucking”. These two methods are modeled and compared with experimental data from central California (Jones, T.L., Richman, J.R., 1995. On Mussels: Mytilus californianus as a Prehistoric Resource, North American Archaeologist 16, 33–58) and archaeological data from the Punta Gorda Rockshelter, a well-stratified coastal shell midden in northern California. Foragers at the Punta Gorda Rockshelter appear to have practiced a “stripping” technique at approximately 24 month intervals. It is argued that, while this strategy reduced immediate foraging returns, it increased the long-term net productivity of the mussel beds.

These findings are discussed in light of the broader literature regarding resource depression and resource cultivation in California prehistory. The conventional interpretation of reductions in the body size in archaeological assemblages is questioned both in terms of rates of return on these individuals and the impact of human predation on local prey populations.

DOI10.1016/j.jas.2007.08.005