Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one type: long-fallow shifting cultivation. While it is a typical adaptation to the highly-weathered nutrient-poor soils of the Amazonian terra firme, fertile environments in the region offer opportunities for agricultural intensification. We hypothesized that Amazonian people have developed divergent bitter manioc cultivation systems as adaptations to the properties of different soils. We compared bitter manioc cultivation in two nutrient-rich and two nutrient-poor soils, along the middle Madeira River in Central Amazonia. We interviewed 249 farmers in 6 localities, sampled their manioc fields, and carried out genetic analysis of bitter manioc l...
This article examines the relationship between Amazonian Dark Earths (ADE) and Caboclo horticultural...
Manioc (Manihot esculenta Crantz) originated in Amazonia and is the main staple for more than 800 mi...
The emergence of sedentism and agriculture in Amazonia continues to sit uncomfortably within account...
Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one ...
Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one ...
Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one ...
While bitter manioc has been one of the most important staple crops in the central Amazon for thousa...
Many commentators highlight the fertility of Anthropogenic Dark Earths (ADE), emphasizing their pote...
Manioc is the most important food crop that originated in Amazonia. Many studies have increased our ...
Amazonia is a major world centre of plant domestication, but the genetics of domestication remains u...
<strong>Abstract</strong> Clara Patricia Peña Venegas (2015). People, soil and manioc interac...
Although many important crops originated in Amazonia, the general patterns of their evolutionary his...
Amazonian indigenous people grow manioc in landscapes of different agricultural potential, yet studi...
Amazonia is a major world centre of plant domestication, but the genetics of domestication remains u...
A recent archaeological survey demonstrates that one of the most durable of all forms of pre-Columbi...
This article examines the relationship between Amazonian Dark Earths (ADE) and Caboclo horticultural...
Manioc (Manihot esculenta Crantz) originated in Amazonia and is the main staple for more than 800 mi...
The emergence of sedentism and agriculture in Amazonia continues to sit uncomfortably within account...
Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one ...
Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one ...
Shifting cultivation in the humid tropics is incredibly diverse, yet research tends to focus on one ...
While bitter manioc has been one of the most important staple crops in the central Amazon for thousa...
Many commentators highlight the fertility of Anthropogenic Dark Earths (ADE), emphasizing their pote...
Manioc is the most important food crop that originated in Amazonia. Many studies have increased our ...
Amazonia is a major world centre of plant domestication, but the genetics of domestication remains u...
<strong>Abstract</strong> Clara Patricia Peña Venegas (2015). People, soil and manioc interac...
Although many important crops originated in Amazonia, the general patterns of their evolutionary his...
Amazonian indigenous people grow manioc in landscapes of different agricultural potential, yet studi...
Amazonia is a major world centre of plant domestication, but the genetics of domestication remains u...
A recent archaeological survey demonstrates that one of the most durable of all forms of pre-Columbi...
This article examines the relationship between Amazonian Dark Earths (ADE) and Caboclo horticultural...
Manioc (Manihot esculenta Crantz) originated in Amazonia and is the main staple for more than 800 mi...
The emergence of sedentism and agriculture in Amazonia continues to sit uncomfortably within account...