Abstract

The tropical forests of the Philippine Archipelago are some of the most threatened in the 21st century. Among the most prominent threats are the introduction of new plant and animal species, as well as new forms of land management (e.g. plantations), that have accompanied industrial expansion. Such threats have a potentially long-term history and prehistory in the Philippines, not just as a consequence of Spanish colonial administration and land-use changes from the 16th century, but also in the context of pre-colonial introductions of rice agriculture and domesticated animals. However, the impacts of such arrivals on local Philippine societies and ecologies have remained relatively unexplored, especially in comparison to contemporary exchanges between Europe and the Neotropics. Here, we evaluate archaeological and historical evidence for the integration of novel plants, animals and economic strategies into local Philippine cultures and economies from 4000 years ago to the 19th century AD. This includes material culture, archaeozoological and archaeobotanical analysis, as well as archival references to pre- and post-colonial urban settlements, the evolution of land management and rural settlements across the Archipelago. We argue that prehistoric land-use changes, as well as the colonial introduction of crops and domesticated animals, represent a potentially interesting contrast to other tropical regions that came under Spanish imperial control between the 15th and 19th centuries. Nevertheless, to determine the full extent of their impacts on social organisation and Philippine landscapes more detailed, long-term multidisciplinary investigation is required.

Highlights

  • The Philippines is a group of some 7100 islands in the western Pacific Ocean, 5° to 20° north of the Equator (Figure 1), and is uniquely rich in endemic fauna and flora (Sodhi et al, 2004)

  • The Philippine Archipelago is one of the largest combined landmasses in Island Southeast Asia to have witnessed three of the major pre-colonial Holocene land-use changes seen across Island Southeast Asia, the introduction of rice agriculture, the introduction of domesticated pigs and the formation of globalised ‘Metal Age’ and Protohistoric trading polities and port sites

  • We suggest that the existing archaeological record demonstrates no ‘Neolithic Revolution’ in land-use following the introduction of domestic animals, and evidence for large-scale prehistoric rice agriculture remains elusive

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Summary

Introduction

The Philippines is a group of some 7100 islands in the western Pacific Ocean, 5° to 20° north of the Equator (Figure 1), and is uniquely rich in endemic fauna and flora (Sodhi et al, 2004). Mudar (1997) reported remains of large bovids, which she identified as water buffaloes, from Sohoton I Cave site in southern Luzon, in layers dated to 10,500 BCE These Early Holocene bovid remains most likely represent an extinct wild endemic species. The first presence of cattle in the Philippine archaeological record was reported in the Metal Age deposits of Nagsabaran site in northern Luzon from layers dated to ca. While there has been very limited research done on archaeobotanical remains from the Metal Age and Protohistoric periods, existing historical records suggest that rice, taro, banana, coconut and sugarcane were increasingly integrated into the subsistence economies of the Philippines by the time of Spanish arrival, with potential widespread modification to Philippine landscapes (Alcina, 1668; Blanco, 1837; de Morga, 1609). By the time American imperial rule started, the new administrators were disappointed by the lack of availability of high-quality lumber for sale on global markets in Luzon and the Visayas, though large areas of forest remained in Mindanao and Palawan (Bankoff, 2007, 2013)

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