-Caveat Lector-

http://www.nytimes.com/library/national/science/033099sci-warzones-animals.h
tml





The green movement has been a useful ally in the preservation of illuminist
myths-
  (I am sympathetic to conservation- but not to environmentalism as a
religion)

March 30, 1999


Unlikely Tool for Species Preservation: Warfare


By WILLIAM K. STEVENS
erhaps no exploration in American history has more famously combined
intrepidity with scientific enterprise than the two-year expedition of Lewis
and Clark from the Mississippi to the Pacific two centuries ago. The
ecologist Daniel B. Botkin, in a 1995 book, called it "the greatest
wilderness trip ever recorded."

But how pristine was that Western wilderness of 1804 to 1806? The answer
depends on how one conceives of the nature of nature, and it has basic
implications for present-day conservation policy.

The Associated Press


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Fond tradition pictures the plains and mountains of the Lewis and Clark era
as a nature untouched by humans and apart from them: a sort of original
realm of the wild, undisturbed and eternal.

Many experts, however, have long since abandoned that vision. Today they see
humans as longtime major players in nature's grand drama, and American
Indians among the main ecological actors of the old West -- not only in the
days of Lewis and Clark but for thousands of years before that.

Now, citing as evidence the marvelously detailed journals of Captains
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, some scientists are proposing that even
Indian warfare played a critical ecological role, by regulating and
maintaining both the numbers and distribution of bison and other big animals
of the West before descendants of Europeans settled it.

Basically, according to this "war zone" theory, Indian hunters were so
proficient that in an individual tribe's homeland, populations of big game
like bison and elk seriously declined and in some cases disappeared.

But in several big buffer zones between warring tribes, where hunters were
loath to spend much time lest their enemies attack them, big game found more
safety and flourished.

These no-man's-lands functioned, in effect, as game preserves and may have
kept the plains bison and other big animals from being hunted to extinction
well before Europeans arrived.

Not everyone agrees wholly with the theory.

But the spotlight it casts on humans' impact on the pre-Columbian landscape
also highlights one of the major conceptual problems facing present-day
efforts to restore and conserve "natural" ecosystems: What target should be
aimed at? Should the goal be to maintain nature as nearly as possible in the
state it was in before the ancestors of the Indians came to America many
millenniums ago? Or to its state just before Europeans appeared on the
continent? Or to some other state altogether?

The war-zone theory is laid out in the February issue of the journal
Conservation Biology by Paul S. Martin, a paleoecologist at the University
of Arizona, and Christine R. Szuter, editor in chief of the University of
Arizona Press.

Dr. Martin says the theory could partly explain why bison, elk, deer and
bears escaped the fate of other, even bigger North American animal species
that became extinct 13,000 years ago. These included, among others,
mammoths, mastodons, camels, giant sloths, tapirs and predators that
depended on them, like giant short-faced bears, a giant wolf called the dire
wolf and the saber-toothed cat.

The bison is the largest surviving life form in North America, and Dr.
Martin is the chief advocate of the view that the earlier vanished species
of megafauna, as they are called, were hunted to extinction in a
continentwide "blitzkrieg" lasting several centuries by human hunters who
had migrated to North America from Siberia 15,000 years ago or more.

"The land had been stripped of most of its native megafauna through human
influence" long before Lewis and Clark appeared on the scene, Dr. Martin and
Dr. Szuter write.

And except for the influence of humans, they say, much larger populations of
the surviving bison, elk and deer would have greeted the white explorers.

Other scientists contend that the ancient megafauna were extinguished by
climatic change or disease, or by a combination of factors. Be that as it
may, it is abundantly clear that Indians and their ancestors, called
paleo-Indians by scientists, transformed the landscape and ecological
relationships of the Western Hemisphere, with both positive and negative
effects.

Indians rearranged the land with earthworks, farm fields, houses, towns and
trails.

As top predators, the impact of their hunting on many species rippled
through pre-Columbian ecosystems.

Indians also set frequent fires for one reason or another, and many
pre-Columbian forests were more open and parklike as a result.

In the West, the Indians' fires helped create, renew and maintain grassland
ecosystems.

Grasses with deep roots flourished, and the tender new shoots that sprang
from them after the fires provided ideal forage for bison. The ecological
loop came full circle when the Indians killed the bison, the underpinning of
their hunter's way of life.

The idea that Indian warfare created game sanctuaries in buffer zones
between tribes has been proposed by a number of authorities.

In the 1960's, Harold Hickerson, an anthropologist, found that in the 18th
and 19th centuries, a contested zone varying from 15,000 to 35,000 square
miles separated the Chippewa and Lakota in Wisconsin and Minnesota.

Indians did sometimes steal in to hunt there, but usually, Mr. Hickerson
wrote, "in constant dread of being surprised by enemies." Deer were abundant
in this tract until the two Indian nations made peace and hunting
intensified in the zone.

In 1995, Elliott West, a historian at the University of Arkansas, identified
contested zones of the central Plains that in the early and mid-1800's
covered huge stretches of what are now Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska. There,
he wrote in a 1995 book, "The Way to the West" (University of New Mexico
Press), bison were "spared the full devotion" of Indians who were occupied
contending with each other.

"The buffalo, in short, got a break," he wrote.

Similar zones have been identified, Dr. Martin and Dr. Szuter report in the
article in Conservation Biology, between the Iroquois and Algonquins around
Lake Champlain and in the upper Amazon River basin between forest tribes.

Now, citing the Lewis and Clark journals, Dr. Martin suggests that in their
era, a great wedge of territory stretching for 46,000 square miles across
the eastern two-thirds of what is now Montana, between the Missouri and
Yellowstone Rivers, was an important war zone.

This region, he and Dr. Szuter wrote, "is commonly regarded by historians,
biologists and TV producers alike as the very essence of 'wild' America."
But in fact, they wrote, the plenitude of bison and other game there
"reflected the status of the area as a buffer zone," where "war parties of
various tribes or nations were ever at hand, and anyone hunting, processing
and drying meat" might be killed by enemies.

The abundance of game in that region was clearly detailed by Lewis and
Clark, says Dr. Martin.

And Clark, in one journal passage, writes, "I have observed that in the
country between the nations which are at war with each other the greatest
numbers of wild animals are to be found."

By contrast, there were no comparable buffer zones west of the Rockies --
and little big game, even though there was plenty of food for bison, elk and
deer.

Dr. Martin's interpretation is that the trans-Rockies Indians simply hunted
the big game until it disappeared. Consequently, the Indians there lived
mainly on fish and roots.

Lewis and Clark's men found these unsatisfactory; unable to find enough big
game to sustain themselves, they cooked and ate horses and dogs that they
bought from the Indians.

The upshot, wrote Dr. Martin and Dr. Szuter, is that neither the scarcity of
game west of the Rockies nor the abundance of it in the war zone to the east
was "truly natural, that is, falling outside human influence or control."
The meaning for conservation efforts, they wrote, is that "the West in the
time of Lewis and Clark was long past any purely 'natural' condition that
might serve as an absolute benchmark for planners."

For his part, Dr. Martin advocates the establishment of some nature
preserves where the pre-Indian natural world might be re-created as closely
as possible.

African or Asian elephants, for instance, might stand in for the extinct
mammoths, enabling scientists to see something of how the pre-human North
American landscape functioned ecologically.

One dissenter from the Martin-Szuter view is Dr. Botkin, an ecologist at
George Mason University in northern Virginia and president of the Center for
the Study of the Environment, a nonprofit research organization in Santa
Barbara, Calif.

He wrote the 1995 book, "Our Natural History: The Lessons of Lewis and
Clark" (Grossett/Putnam).

While there may have been more bison in war zones than elsewhere, Dr. Botkin
said, Dr. Martin seems to assume that the ecology of the plains remained
static.

In fact, said Dr. Botkin, the bison were highly migratory, and would
probably have migrated in and out of war zones.

On a more fundamental level, he says, the Martin-Szuter paper implies that
humans are a force outside nature, that their impact is unnatural and
therefore undesirable. On the contrary, Dr. Botkin says, humans are an
integral part of nature, one of many forces that have long kept the natural
world in a constant state of flux.

There have been many states of nature in the past; for instance, many parts
of North America have been covered by forests, grasslands or ice in
different eras, and the assemblages of animals living there have varied
accordingly.

The transformations wrought by Indians created yet other versions of nature.


Varying states of nature, said Dr. Botkin, constitute a "set of designs"
from which today's conservation planners can choose in deciding what model
to use as a standard for conservation and restoration projects. The
durability of a particular design is not necessarily relevant, he said: If
one wanted to pick the most durable design of the last few hundred thousand
years in North America, "you go back to ice."

Therefore, he said, the state of nature encountered by Lewis and Clark is as
valid a model as any of a number of other versions that have come and gone
over the eons -- and is probably the one most Americans today would prefer.

The larger point, he said, is that "there is not a single truth about what's
natural." The main value of the Martin-Szuter view, he said, is that it
"points up that the discussion of what is natural is alive and well, and
that it's not yet resolved."

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