Artigo Revisado por pares

Temporal Variation in Polynesian Fishing Strategies: The Southern Cook Islands in Regional Perspective

1992; University of Hawaii Press; Volume: 31; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

1535-8283

Autores

Melinda S. Allen,

Tópico(s)

Island Studies and Pacific Affairs

Resumo

Geographic variability in Polynesian fishhook assemblages has long been recognized but largely unexplained. West Polynesian assemblages are typically small in number, relatively uniform in morphology, and often manufactured from Turbo. Those from East Polynesia are comparatively large and morphologically varied, and Pinctada mar- garitifera is the preferred raw material. Drawing on both geographically dispersed assemblages and the temporal sequence from Aitutaki, Cook Islands, I suggest that these assemblage differences stem from both structural properties of the two shell spe- cies and their differential availability through time and across the region. I also examine two sets of selective conditions, one that initially led to an increase in the frequency of angling in East Polynesia and a second that subsequently fostered a decline in angling on Aitutaki and possibly elsewhere in the region.

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