IER   26026
INSTITUTO DE ECOLOGIA REGIONAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
MEGAHERBIVORES TRANSITION ALONG AN ANDEAN ELEVATIONAL GRADIENT
Autor/es:
GRAU HECTOR RICARDO; NAVARRO CARLOS JAVIER; ARAOZ EZEQUIEL; MALIZIA AGUSTINA; BABOT JUDITH; IZQUIERDO ANDREA ELISA
Lugar:
Nova Friburgo
Reunión:
Jornada; II International Conference on Research for Sustainable Development in Mountains Regions: Connecting Science to Practice; 2018
Institución organizadora:
Universidad Federal do Ceará
Resumen:
Historically, herbivory by large native mammals was replaced by domestic livestock. The Andes is not exception: following the European arrival, large herbivores communities (mostly camelids and deer) were largely replaced by sheep, cattle, goats, horses and donkeys. Due to current trends towards human population urbanization and dis-intensification of agricultural marginal areas, this trend could be reversing in different regions, with important ecological consequences. Here, we describe the patterns along the elevational gradient of subtropical mountains of northwest Argentina. In lowland montane forests, tree communities show an expansion of herbivory-sensitive species, likely due to the low herbivores density resulting both from decreasing livestock (cattle) pressure and a slow recovery from past defaunation (e.g. Mazama deer, Tayassu peccaries). In middle elevation tree-grasses ecotones, decreasing sheep density without rapid recovery of native fauna, implies a higher availability of fine fuels and resulting increase in fire frequency. In high elevation Puna desserts, decreasing livestock is being rapidly replaced by expansion of native camelids. These specific change could have consequences for both herbivory and predation; which begins to be reflected in Puma-livestock conflicts. Overall, this diversity of ?megaherbivory transitions? resembles the well studied processes of ?forest transition? as a mayor land change resulting from socioecofine fuels and resulting increase in fire frequency. In high elevation Puna desserts, decreasing livestock is being rapidly replaced by expansion of native camelids. These specific change could have consequences for both herbivory and predation; which begins to be reflected in Puma-livestock conflicts. Overall, this diversity of ?megaherbivory transitions? resembles the well studied processes of ?forest transition? as a mayor land change resulting from socioeconomic modernization, and we discuss the variety of socioecological drivers and consequences.