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Articles

Using sea urchin remains to infer the health of kelp forest ecosystems in the past: Identification, quantification, and allometric reconstructions of harvested sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus spp.) on California’s Channel Islands

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Pages 246-273 | Received 18 Nov 2019, Accepted 21 Apr 2020, Published online: 14 Jul 2020
 

Abstract

Sea urchins, one of the few echinoids harvested for human consumption, are found in archaeological sites from coastal settings around the world spanning at least the past ∼15,000 years. Sea urchin tests and spines are commonly found in archaeological shell middens on California’s Channel Islands, sometimes forming dense “urchin lenses.” Though ubiquitous, the fragile nature of their test (outer shell) results in a high degree of fragmentation, complicating identification and quantification in archaeological assemblages. I discuss issues regarding archaeological sea urchin remains off the coast of western North America and present a method for estimating the sizes of harvested purple (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) and red (Mesocentrotus franciscanus) sea urchins through allometry, allowing archaeologists to configure size/age estimates for harvested populations in the past. These methods are applied to two archaeological assemblages from San Nicolas and San Miguel islands, revealing evidence of a potential urchin proliferation event in the California Bight during the late Middle Holocene, and relative consistency in the primary types and sizes of harvested specimens through time. As a keystone species dominating ecological interactions in kelp forest ecosystems, sea urchin remains can provide deep historical perspective on the relative state of intertidal ecosystems.

Acknowledgements

The faunal data analyzed in this study was generously provided by René Vellanoweth and is much appreciated. Many thanks to Jon Erlandson for his edits, comments, and suggestions on my dissertation which contains the modern and CA-SMI-603 study presented here. I thank Frances White for her instruction and assistance with statistical tests. I am also grateful to Alan Shanks, who provided beneficial discussion. I thank William Kendig and other CSULA students for their help with initial processing of some of the modern sea urchin remains. I also thank two anonymous reviewers and journal editors for providing helpful comments.

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