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Centuries of compounding human influence on Amazonian forests

Centuries of compounding human influence on Amazonian forests
Centuries of compounding human influence on Amazonian forests
Recent evidence suggests that the ecological footprints of pre-Columbian Indigenous peoples in Amazonia persist in modern forests. Ecological impacts resulting from European colonization c. 1550 CE and the Amazonian Rubber Boom c. 1850 to 1920 CE are largely unexplored but could be important additive influences on forest structure and tree species composition. Using environmental niche models, we show the highest probabilities of pre-Columbian and colonial occupation sites, and hence human-induced ecological influences, occurred in forests along rivers. In many areas, the predicted pre-Columbian and colonial distributions overlap spatially with the potential for superimposed ecological influences. Environmental gradients are known to structure Amazonian vegetation composition, but they are also strong predictors of past human influence, both spatially and temporally. Our comparisons of model outputs with relative abundances of Amazonian tree species suggest that pre-Columbian and colonial-period ecological legacies are associated with modern forest composition.
Indigenous land use, colonization, ecological legacy, hyperdominance, tropical forest
0027-8424
McMichael, Crystal N.H.
9165af5f-82ae-4700-adf1-dea2606f4e5d
Bush, Mark B.
993998ed-f863-4b27-8f6b-33f334ed0586
Steege, Hans ter
6cf485c6-c11e-4fd7-9845-ed6449344928
De Novaes Nascimento, Majoi
40059943-f59a-49b2-8e7e-7b3d3f7f62af
et al.
McMichael, Crystal N.H.
9165af5f-82ae-4700-adf1-dea2606f4e5d
Bush, Mark B.
993998ed-f863-4b27-8f6b-33f334ed0586
Steege, Hans ter
6cf485c6-c11e-4fd7-9845-ed6449344928
De Novaes Nascimento, Majoi
40059943-f59a-49b2-8e7e-7b3d3f7f62af

McMichael, Crystal N.H., Bush, Mark B. and Steege, Hans ter , et al. (2025) Centuries of compounding human influence on Amazonian forests. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 122 (47), [e2514040122]. (doi:10.1073/pnas.2514040122).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that the ecological footprints of pre-Columbian Indigenous peoples in Amazonia persist in modern forests. Ecological impacts resulting from European colonization c. 1550 CE and the Amazonian Rubber Boom c. 1850 to 1920 CE are largely unexplored but could be important additive influences on forest structure and tree species composition. Using environmental niche models, we show the highest probabilities of pre-Columbian and colonial occupation sites, and hence human-induced ecological influences, occurred in forests along rivers. In many areas, the predicted pre-Columbian and colonial distributions overlap spatially with the potential for superimposed ecological influences. Environmental gradients are known to structure Amazonian vegetation composition, but they are also strong predictors of past human influence, both spatially and temporally. Our comparisons of model outputs with relative abundances of Amazonian tree species suggest that pre-Columbian and colonial-period ecological legacies are associated with modern forest composition.

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Accepted/In Press date: 8 October 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 November 2025
Published date: 25 November 2025
Keywords: Indigenous land use, colonization, ecological legacy, hyperdominance, tropical forest

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507689
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507689
ISSN: 0027-8424
PURE UUID: 30d072a2-c280-41d9-9401-3dbaff45fd77
ORCID for Majoi De Novaes Nascimento: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4009-4905

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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2025 17:40
Last modified: 20 Dec 2025 03:55

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Contributors

Author: Crystal N.H. McMichael
Author: Mark B. Bush
Author: Hans ter Steege
Author: Majoi De Novaes Nascimento ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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