Journal
ECOLOGY
Volume 103, Issue 10, Pages -Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3783
Keywords
16th century; biodiversity baseline; historical ecology; historical rercords; pre-industrial era; species distributions; species presence
Categories
Funding
- Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [LIFEWATCH2019-09-CSIC-13]
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This study uses a historical survey conducted in Spain between 1574 and 1582 to gather data on wild plants, wild animals, and crops/domestic animals. The findings can help reconstruct historical land use, habitat cover, and species distributions.
Documenting and understanding long-term biodiversity change is limited by the availability of historical data, particularly from periods preceding major anthropogenic changes associated with the Industrial Revolution. We mined the information of a standardized historical survey developed in 628 localities across Spain between 1574 and 1582 (Relaciones Topograficas de Felipe II) with the goal of producing a general characterization of Spanish settlements, including, though not limited to, natural resources. From this survey, we were able to gather 7309 records for 75 wild plant taxa, 89 wild animal taxa, and 60 crop and domestic animal taxa. These data can be used to reconstruct historical land use and habitat cover, and model historical distributions of many species, including emblematic ones such as wolf and bear, which can establish reference distributions to assess range and niche expansion, contraction, and shifts. Data are provided under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC) 4.0 License. Please cite this data paper when the data are used in publications. The authors are open to collaborate in projects based on this dataset.
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