IBIGEO   22622
INSTITUTO DE BIO Y GEOCIENCIAS DEL NOA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
A woody plant community and tree-cacti associations change with distance to a water source in a dry Chaco forest of Argentina
Autor/es:
TRIGO, CAROLINA B.; DERLINDATI, ENRIQUE J.; PALAVECINO, ANTONIO; TÁLAMO, ANDRÉS; MARÁS, GUSTAVO A.; NÚÑEZ-REGUEIRO, MAURICIO M.; BARCHUK, ALICIA H.
Revista:
RANGELAND JOURNAL
Editorial:
AUSTRALIAN RANGELAND SOC
Referencias:
Año: 2017 vol. 39 p. 15 - 23
ISSN:
1036-9872
Resumen:
In semiarid regions, livestock is concentrated around water sources generating a piosphere pattern (gradients of woody vegetation degradation with increasing proximity to water). Close to the water source, livestock may affect the composition, structure and regeneration strategies of woody vegetation. We used the proximity from a water source as a proxy of grazing pressure. Our objectives were (1) to compare woody vegetation attributes (richness, diversity, species composition, density and basal area) and ground cover between sites at two distances to a water source: near (higher grazing pressure) and far from the water source (lower grazing pressure), and (2) to quantify and compare cases of spatial association among the columnar cacti Stetsonia coryne (Salm-Dyck) Britton and Rose (Cactaceae), and the dominant tree Bulnesia sarmientoi Lorentz ex Griseb. (Zygophyllaceae). We used a paired design with eight pairs of rectangular plots distributed along a large and representative natural water source. We found lower total species richness, plant density and soil cover near than far from water source, and more cases of spatial associations between the two species studied. Our results show evidence of increased livestock impacts around water sources. However, we found no difference in terms of species composition or basal area at near versus far sites. We conclude that grazing pressure might be changing some attributes of the woody plant community, and that the association of young trees with thorny plants (grazing refuge) could be a regeneration mechanism in this semiarid forest with high grazing pressure.