Location:  Home » Spondias mombin  
Categories
Apparel
Automotive
Baby
Beauty
Books
Computers
DVD
Electronics
Gourmet Food
Gocery
Health
Home & Garden
Industrial & Science
Jewelry
Kindle Store
Kitchen
Magazines
MP3 Downloads
Music
Muscial Instruments
Office Products
Outdoor Living
Pet Supplies
Photo & Camera
Software
Sporting Goods
Tools & Hardware
Toys
Unbox
VHS
PC & Video Games
Watches
Wireless

On the origin of the tree Spondias mombin in Africa [An article from: Journal of Historical Geography]

On the origin of the tree Spondias mombin in Africa [An article from: Journal of Historical Geography]

enlarge enlarge 
Author: C.s. Duvall
Publisher: Elsevier

Buy New: $7.95




Format: Html
Media: Digital
Pages: 17



Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Historical Geography, published by Elsevier in 2006. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
This paper examines evidence for the origin of the tree Spondias mombin in Africa, where it is generally described as introduced from the Neotropics. Based on biogeographical, ecological, and historical evidence, this paper argues that the tree reached Africa via natural, long-distance dispersal, and should be considered an African native plant. The idea that it is introduced appeared in 1868, when it was a scientifically justifiable conclusion reflecting the limitations of nineteenth-century biogeographical knowledge. By the early twentieth century, representing Spondias mombin as a human introduction in Africa was no longer scientifically justifiable because of advances in knowledge of the African flora and plant dispersal ecology. Nonetheless, most authors continued to represent the tree as introduced, in part because such representation was consonant with dominant images of the African environment: (a) that the continent had suffered extensive deforestation in the recent past, and (b) that Africa's flora was depauperate in fruit trees prior to the coming of Europeans. Recent authors continue to describe Spondias mombin as introduced because they have not sufficiently considered the historic contexts of primary and secondary sources on Neotropical plant introductions in Africa. This paper concludes that the human role in creating the African portion of the trans-Atlantic tropical flora has been overemphasized. Natural plant dispersal across the Atlantic may be more frequent than generally accepted.


Powered by Associate-O-Matic


Search for Spondias mombin in Tutorials
Search for Spondias mombin in Encyclopedia
Search for Spondias mombin in Dictionary
Search for Spondias mombin in Open Directory
Search for Spondias mombin in Store
Search for Spondias mombin in SiteGetter
Search for Spondias mombin in ArticleGig
Search for Spondias mombin in TradeCrafts
Medical school help

Spondias mombin
Spondias mombin top Spondias mombin