Where archaeology and wildlife management meet: the relevance of studying the Holocene history of human-wildlife interactions in the central Balkans for regional conservation efforts
Autori
Vuković, SonjaMarković, Dimitrije
Sabanov, Amalia
Ostala autorstva
Babić, StašaMilosavljević, Monika
Poglavlje u monografiji (Objavljena verzija)
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentuApstrakt
As some of the greatest threats humanity is currently facing, such as climate change and biodiversity loss, have their roots in our distant past, archaeology is becoming more and more involved in the research of their causes and effects. Archaeologists are becoming more aware of the significance of studying long-term human-environmental relationships via analysis of animal and plant remains from archaeological sites for modern environmental problems, and paleoenvironmental data are sometimes included in conservation decisions. In this paper, within the framework of the scientific project ARCHAEOWILD, which studies human-wildlife interactions in the Holocene past of the CentralBalkans, we stress the significance of research that provides data on the spatiotemporal distribution of wildlife, extinction dynamics, translocations, as well as genetic diversity and dietary patterns of large mammals in the past for future wildlife management decisions in the region
Ključne reči:
archaeology / archaeozoology / archaeobotany / wildlife management / Holocene / Central BalkansIzvor:
Archaeological Theory at the Edge(s), 2023, 153-166Izdavač:
- Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade
Finansiranje / projekti:
- New Horizons for Science and Religion in Central and Eastern Europe
- ARCHAEOWILD - The Holocene History of Human-Wildlife Conflict and Coexistence: Archaeozoological, Archaeobotanical, Isotopic, Ancient DNA, Iconographic and Written Evidence from the Central Balkans (RS-ScienceFundRS-Ideje-7750265)
Institucija/grupa
Arheologija / ArchaeologyTY - CHAP AU - Vuković, Sonja AU - Marković, Dimitrije AU - Sabanov, Amalia PY - 2023 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5209 AB - As some of the greatest threats humanity is currently facing, such as climate change and biodiversity loss, have their roots in our distant past, archaeology is becoming more and more involved in the research of their causes and effects. Archaeologists are becoming more aware of the significance of studying long-term human-environmental relationships via analysis of animal and plant remains from archaeological sites for modern environmental problems, and paleoenvironmental data are sometimes included in conservation decisions. In this paper, within the framework of the scientific project ARCHAEOWILD, which studies human-wildlife interactions in the Holocene past of the CentralBalkans, we stress the significance of research that provides data on the spatiotemporal distribution of wildlife, extinction dynamics, translocations, as well as genetic diversity and dietary patterns of large mammals in the past for future wildlife management decisions in the region PB - Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade T2 - Archaeological Theory at the Edge(s) T1 - Where archaeology and wildlife management meet: the relevance of studying the Holocene history of human-wildlife interactions in the central Balkans for regional conservation efforts EP - 166 SP - 153 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5209 ER -
@inbook{ author = "Vuković, Sonja and Marković, Dimitrije and Sabanov, Amalia", year = "2023", abstract = "As some of the greatest threats humanity is currently facing, such as climate change and biodiversity loss, have their roots in our distant past, archaeology is becoming more and more involved in the research of their causes and effects. Archaeologists are becoming more aware of the significance of studying long-term human-environmental relationships via analysis of animal and plant remains from archaeological sites for modern environmental problems, and paleoenvironmental data are sometimes included in conservation decisions. In this paper, within the framework of the scientific project ARCHAEOWILD, which studies human-wildlife interactions in the Holocene past of the CentralBalkans, we stress the significance of research that provides data on the spatiotemporal distribution of wildlife, extinction dynamics, translocations, as well as genetic diversity and dietary patterns of large mammals in the past for future wildlife management decisions in the region", publisher = "Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade", journal = "Archaeological Theory at the Edge(s)", booktitle = "Where archaeology and wildlife management meet: the relevance of studying the Holocene history of human-wildlife interactions in the central Balkans for regional conservation efforts", pages = "166-153", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5209" }
Vuković, S., Marković, D.,& Sabanov, A.. (2023). Where archaeology and wildlife management meet: the relevance of studying the Holocene history of human-wildlife interactions in the central Balkans for regional conservation efforts. in Archaeological Theory at the Edge(s) Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade., 153-166. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5209
Vuković S, Marković D, Sabanov A. Where archaeology and wildlife management meet: the relevance of studying the Holocene history of human-wildlife interactions in the central Balkans for regional conservation efforts. in Archaeological Theory at the Edge(s). 2023;:153-166. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5209 .
Vuković, Sonja, Marković, Dimitrije, Sabanov, Amalia, "Where archaeology and wildlife management meet: the relevance of studying the Holocene history of human-wildlife interactions in the central Balkans for regional conservation efforts" in Archaeological Theory at the Edge(s) (2023):153-166, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5209 .