- Source: Archaeophyte
An archaeophyte is a plant species which is non-native to a geographical region, but which was an introduced species in "ancient" times, rather than being a modern introduction. Those arriving after are called neophytes.
The cut-off date is usually the beginning of the early modern period (turn of the 15th or 16th century). In Britain, archaeophytes are considered to be those species first introduced prior to the year 1492, when Christopher Columbus arrived in the New World and the Columbian Exchange began.
Background
Archaeophytes include numerous weed species the seeds of which have been found in archaeological excavations – to which they had been brought by people (anthropochory), animals (zoochory) or the wind (anemochory).
In some cases, introduced species, whether archaeophytes or neophytes, may have been native species before the ice ages, which extirpated vast numbers of plant species. Central European archaeophytes almost all come from the Mediterranean region and the neighboring areas of Western Asia, as they were introduced into Central Europe with the beginning of agriculture and increasingly since Roman times. They therefore include many familiar plants such as cultivated apples, pears, plums, cereals such as wheat and barley as well as flowers and medicinal plants such as poppy, cornflower, real chamomile and corn.
Australia's collision with the Eurasian Plate led to additional South-east Asian plants entering the Australian flora like the Lepidium and Chenopodioideae. Moreover, Aboriginal Australian and New Guinean contact prior to rising sea levels that isolated Australia from New Guinea in the early Holocene may explain the presence of New Guinea domesticates such as taro (Colocasia esculenta) and bananas (Musa acuminata) in northern Australia. Assisted migrations may also be the reason why some rainforest plants from New Guinea entered northern Australia more than 10,000 years ago.
Examples
Archaeophytes are often cultivated species, transported deliberately by humans, but are also often weeds of cultivation, spread accidentally with grain. Archaeophytes in the United Kingdom include sweet chestnut, wheat, field poppy, flixweed, red valerian, ground elders, soapwort, small toadflax, good king henry and cornflower.
Other examples include:
Agrostemma githago
Avena fatua
Chenopodium polyspermum
Euphorbia helioscopia
Setaria viridis
Vicia hirsuta
Galium tricornutum
See also
Biogeography
Chorology
Glossary of invasion biology terms
Introduced species
Invasive species
List of invasive species
Hemerochory
Adventive plant
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Bunga milu biru
- Archaeophyte
- List of superrosids of Great Britain and Ireland
- Sambucus ebulus
- Synanthrope
- Artemisia absinthium
- Carob
- List of trees of Great Britain and Ireland
- Lactuca indica
- Lathyrus aphaca
- Glossary of botanical terms