4.8 Article

Large variation in availability of Maya food plant sources during ancient droughts

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2115657118

Keywords

Maya; ethnobotany; agriculture; drought; sustainability

Funding

  1. University of California Riverside Department of Botany and Plant Sciences
  2. University of California Agricultural Experiment Station
  3. US Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

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The Yucatan Peninsula experienced a series of droughts during the Classic Maya period, which may have contributed to the disruption or collapse of Maya polities. While climate change alone cannot explain the political turmoil of the time, strong droughts could have resulted in limited food availability, leading to famine, migration, and societal decline. This study reveals that there was a greater diversity of food sources beyond maize available to the Maya during the drought, allowing for a continuing food supply under most conditions.
Paleoclimatic evidence indicating a series of droughts in the Yucatan Peninsula during the Terminal Classic period suggests that climate change may have contributed to the disruption or collapse of Classic Maya polities. Although climate change cannot fully account for the multifaceted, political turmoil of the period, it is clear that droughts of strong magnitude could have limited food availability, potentially causing famine, migration, and societal decline. Maize was undoubtedly an important staple food of the ancient Maya, but a complete analysis of other food resources that would have been available during drought remains unresolved. Here, we assess drought resistance of all 497 indigenous food plant species documented in ethnographic, ethnobotanical, and botanical studies as having been used by the lowland Maya and classify the availability of these plant species and their edible components under various drought scenarios. Our analysis indicates availability of 83% of food plant species in short-term drought, but this percentage drops to 22% of food plant species available in moderate drought up to 1 y. During extreme drought, lasting several years, our analysis indicates availability of 11% of food plant species. Our results demonstrate a greater diversity of food sources beyond maize that would have been available to the Maya during climate disruption of the Terminal Classic period than has been previously acknowledged. While drought would have necessitated shifts in dietary patterns, the range of physiological drought responses for the available food plants would have allowed a continuing food supply under all but the most dire conditions.

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