About this Research Topic
This research topic aims to explore how people have adapted to island environments through distinctive ways of using and managing biological resources. It seeks to answer questions about the diversity of subsistence strategies employed by island societies and how these strategies reflect the unique challenges and opportunities presented by insular environments. The research will engage a comparative perspective, examining the biogeographic, geophysical, and cultural circumstances that have shaped island societies. It will also consider the role of isolation, social interactions, and the introduction of non-local biological resources in shaping subsistence strategies. The goal is to uncover patterns of adaptation, including sustainable management practices and cultural transformations, with implications for contemporary conservation and climate change action.
To gather further insights into the global and temporal scope of island subsistence strategies, we welcome articles addressing, but not limited to, the following themes:
- The process and outcome of plant or animal introductions
- Woodland management strategies
- Diachronic evolution of land and/or seascape exploitation
- Response to climate change or catastrophic events
- The role of contacts versus the duration of isolation
- Biodiversity loss or augmentation
- Integration of plant and animal data sets
We encourage submissions that employ both traditional and innovative methodological approaches, including transdisciplinary research, seda- and aDNA analysis, biomolecular analysis, and dendroprovenancing, to address new research questions in this field.
Keywords: Island archaeology, Archaeobotany, Zooarchaeology, Livestock husbandry strategy, Isotope analyses, Storage systems, Genetic isolation, Wood management
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.