IANIGLA   20881
INSTITUTO ARGENTINO DE NIVOLOGIA, GLACIOLOGIA Y CIENCIAS AMBIENTALES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
A first assessment of the land management effect on the ecological role of large trees as habitat refuges for desert small mammals
Autor/es:
SZYMAÑSKI, CAROLINA R.; TABENI, SOLANA; CAMPOS, CLAUDIA M.; CAMPOS, CLAUDIA M.; ALVAREZ, JUAN A.; ALVAREZ, JUAN A.; SZYMAÑSKI, CAROLINA R.; TABENI, SOLANA
Revista:
BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY
Editorial:
ELSEVIER GMBH, URBAN & FISCHER VERLAG
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 48 p. 136 - 145
ISSN:
1439-1791
Resumen:
Large old trees are keystone organisms that generate a highly connected network of interactions because they provide refuge and feeding sites to mammals with different habitat requirements through their under canopy structure and deadwood. In dry woodlands, these keystone trees are found within agricultural landscapes, where grazing and deadwood removal are the main subsistence activities carried out by local people. These activities can modify the structure of trees and, in turn, affect small mammal communities. Our objective was to assess how different land management types modify the structure of P. flexuosa trees, and to determine the effects of modified tree structure on the abundance and composition of small mammal communities. The study was conducted in P. flexuosa forests within a protected area and in grazing fields. We found that the trees and the vegetation structure beneath their canopies reflect the management history of areas. Trees in the protected area and in an abandoned field were structurally more similar to one another than were those in grazing fields with deadwood removal and, in turn, presented greater total abundances of small mammals. Under tree canopy, the amount of deadwood and grass cover favor the presence of species that need closed and more complex habitats. Also, protection provided by the trees was differentially perceived by species, according to their ecological requirements. We can conclude that different land management scenarios allow for the conservation of the whole rodent assemblage and that, the trees determine the presence of species, particularly of those needing more complex habitats.