| Literature DB >> 26925319 |
Jan C De Vynck1, Richard M Cowling1, Alastair J Potts1, Curtis W Marean2.
Abstract
The coastal environments of South Africa's Cape Floristic Region (CFR) provide some of the earliest and most abundant evidence for the emergence of cognitively modern humans. In particular, the south coast of the CFR provided a uniquely diverse resource base for hunter-gatherers, which included marine shellfish, game, and carbohydrate-bearing plants, especially those with Underground Storage Organs (USOs). It has been hypothesized that these resources underpinned the continuity of human occupation in the region since the Middle Pleistocene. Very little research has been conducted on the foraging potential of carbohydrate resources in the CFR. This study focuses on the seasonal availability of plants with edible carbohydrates at six-weekly intervals over a two-year period in four vegetation types on South Africa's Cape south coast. Different plant species were considered available to foragers if the edible carbohydrate was directly (i.e. above-ground edible portions) or indirectly (above-ground indications to below-ground edible portions) visible to an expert botanist familiar with this landscape. A total of 52 edible plant species were recorded across all vegetation types. Of these, 33 species were geophytes with edible USOs and 21 species had aboveground edible carbohydrates. Limestone Fynbos had the richest flora, followed by Strandveld, Renosterveld and lastly, Sand Fynbos. The availability of plant species differed across vegetation types and between survey years. The number of available USO species was highest for a six-month period from winter to early summer (Jul-Dec) across all vegetation types. Months of lowest species' availability were in mid-summer to early autumn (Jan-Apr); the early winter (May-Jun) values were variable, being highest in Limestone Fynbos. However, even during the late summer carbohydrate "crunch," 25 carbohydrate bearing species were visible across the four vegetation types. To establish a robust resource landscape will require additional spatial mapping of plant species abundances. Nonetheless, our results demonstrate that plant-based carbohydrate resources available to Stone Age foragers of the Cape south coast, especially USOs belonging to the Iridaceae family, are likely to have comprised a reliable and nutritious source of calories over most of the year.Entities:
Keywords: Cape Floristic Region; Cognitively modern humans; Edible fruit; Fynbos; Geophytes; Hunter-gatherers; Renosterveld; Strandveld; Underground storage organs
Year: 2016 PMID: 26925319 PMCID: PMC4768670 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1(A) The location and major vegetation types of the study region and the plot localities [1: Renosterveld (purple); 2: Limestone Fynbos (green); 3: Sand Fynbos (yellow); and 4: Strandveld (orange; restricted to the coastal margin; see Table S1 for further plot details)]. (B) A Walter-Leith climate diagram from the town of Still Bay (∼5 km from plot 2). (C) Photos taken within the four plots in the different vegetation types.
Summary of edible species in 3.6 ha plots situated in four dominant vegetation types along the Cape south coast.
| USOs | Fruit | Other | All | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Renosterveld | 8 | 6 | 2 | 16 |
| Sand Fynbos | 5 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| Limestone Fynbos | 21 | 11 | 7 | 39 |
| Strandveld | 15 | 8 | 5 | 28 |
| Across all types | 33 | 14 | 8 | 52 |
Notes:
‘Other’ includes species with edible: seed pods, seeds, leaves, and inflorescences.
Note that this is the number of unique species (i.e. some species are shared between vegetation types or have more than one edible part).
Figure 2A breakdown of the number of months in which different plant species (with edible carbohydrates) are visible through the year separated into (A) Underground Storage Organs (USOs) and (B) aboveground carbohydrates (e.g fruit, seed pods, seeds, leaves or inflorescences).
Figure 3The seasonal availability of edible species visible to a human forager in four vegetation types dominant along the Cape south coast.
Underground storage organs are geophytes that have tubers, corms, bulbs or rhizomes, while above-ground carbohydrates includes species with edible fruit, seed pods, seeds, leaves or inflorescences. The number of new species observed since the previous survey is shown in each circle; this provides an indication of species turnover.
Species available during the ‘carbohydrate-crunch’ late summer period (February–March) in both survey years.
| Vegetation type | Carbohydrate category | Species |
|---|---|---|
| Renosterveld | Underground storage organ | |
| Aboveground | ||
| Limestone Fynbos | Underground storage organ | |
| Aboveground | ||
| Sand Fynbos | Underground storage organ | |
| Aboveground | ||
| Strandveld | Underground storage organ | |
| Aboveground |