INVESTIGADORES
KITZBERGER Thomas
artículos
Título:
Ecological impacts of introduced animals in Nahuel Huapi National Park, Argentina
Autor/es:
VEBLEN, T.T.; MERMOZ, M.; MARTIN, C.; KITZBERGER, T.
Revista:
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Editorial:
BLACKWELL SCIENCE
Referencias:
Año: 1992 vol. 6 p. 71 - 83
ISSN:
0888-8892
Resumen:
Abstract: In Nahuel Huapi National Park in southwestern Argentina, livestock and exotic deer pose important management problems. Due to the economic and social benefits of sport hunting and production of livestock, it is politically impractical to completely eradicate these animals from the park. Instead, park managers attempt to minimize the effects of these introduced animals by preventing their spread into more pristine parts of the park and by trying to diminish their population densities. Managers are also promoting the relocation of livestock production to appropriate sites in the National Reserve part of the park where livestock raising is permitted. Detailed information on the ecological impacts of introduced herbivores is needed both to guide management of the different vegetation types of the park and to support the park managers' public relations campaign justifying exotic animal control. We examined the ecological effects of introduced animals along the vegetation gradient from Andean rain forests through xeric woodlands to the Patagonian steppe. We sampled 30 stands for floristic composition and structure, assessed browse intensity, and compared stands of similar abiotic habitat but of different browsing regimes. Deer and livestock have significantly altered floristic composition and stand structure along this gradient. They impair tree regeneration and pose a long-term threat to the continued existence of a forest cover.