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Gardens without weeds? Pre-European Māori gardens and inadvertent introductions
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Gardens without weeds? Pre-European Māori gardens and inadvertent introductions

Helen Leach
New Zealand journal of botany, Vol.43(1), pp.271-284
01/2005
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/50629

Abstract

concepts of weeds invasive species New Zealand Polynesia Māori gardens
The weed-free status of the first Māori gardens seen by Europeans may be attributed to high standards of care and fewer unwanted species. Māori swidden practices involving long fallow periods mitigated against invasion by native species, and the transfer of Polynesian cultigens to temperate ecosystems helped eliminate tropical "weeds". However, botanical, historical, and linguistic evidence suggests the inadvertent introduction to New Zealand by Polynesians of at least six tropical species. An argument is made that the negative European concept of "weed" was not held by Māori.

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