Aboriginal communities successfully farmed oysters for thousands of years before colonisation

Publicly released:
Australia; VIC; QLD
Photo by Tommaso Cantelli on Unsplash
Photo by Tommaso Cantelli on Unsplash

Modern oyster farmers have much to learn from Aboriginal communities along the east coast of Australia, according to Aussie and international researchers studying how Indigenous people across the world farmed the salty snacks before colonisation. The researchers say archaeological records and cultural knowledge show oysters were overseen by these communities for up to 10,000 years, with communities including the Quandamooka people still using ancestral knowledge to extend the oyster season. The researchers say this knowledge should be better incorporated into current management of oyster reefs rather than relying on post-colonisation knowledge.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Archaeology: Oyster fisheries managed by Indigenous communities existed for more than 5,000 years

Oyster fisheries managed by Indigenous communities in North America and Australia persisted successfully for more than 5,000 years prior to the arrival of European colonists, a paper in Nature Communications suggests. This research demonstrates that these fisheries were both managed and woven into cultural traditions, and that they could inform future fishery management. 

Oysters are important indicators of the health of coastal ecosystems and also carry cultural and economic significance within communities worldwide. However, as much as 80% of the 19th century oyster reef areas have been lost by the early 21st century. Current management strategies for oyster fisheries rely primarily on data from the past 200 years, a period when many global fisheries collapsed due to over harvest, pollution, competition with non-native species, and habitat loss. Despite increasing recognition of the importance of historical data in understanding the world’s ecosystems, knowledge from Indigenous communities and archaeology has often been neglected in conservation and ecology.

Leslie Reeder-Myers and colleagues investigate historical oyster fisheries in eastern Australia, the Pacific Coast of North America, and the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coast of North America. They combine regional sea level histories and historical catch records with archaeological records on oyster abundance, geographical distribution of sites containing oysters and ethno-historic accounts of harvest, management and farming from Indigenous communities.  The authors suggest that oyster fisheries overseen by Indigenous communities were widespread and persisted for 5,000–10,000 years. The authors indicate that the oysters were actively stewarded and that they played a central cultural and dietary role. The authors suggest this contradicts the theory that pre-colonial nearshore ecosystems were ‘pristine’ or ‘wild’, and were instead resources successfully stewarded by Indigenous communities.

The authors suggest that future management of oyster reefs must centre Indigenous communities and Indigenous community members to develop inclusive, fair and successful strategies for harvest, restoration and management.

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Springer Nature, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: The University of Queensland, Monash University, ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (CABAH), Temple University, USA, Smithsonian Institution, USA
Funder: Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.