INVESTIGADORES
BALDI ricardo
artículos
Título:
Rewilding Patagonia
Autor/es:
WALKER S.; NOVARO A.; FUNES M.; BALDI R.; CHEHEBAR C,; RAMILO E.; AYESA J.; BRAN D.; VILA A.; BONINO N.
Revista:
Wild Earth
Editorial:
The Wildlands Project
Referencias:
Lugar: Richmond; Año: 2005 vol. f/w p. 32 - 37
ISSN:
1055-1166
Resumen:
Rewilding Patagonia - Wild Earth. The Patagonian steppe of Argentina is a vast area-almost 750,000 square kilometers- of arid plains and scrub ecosystems in the rain shadow of the southern Andes, at the tip of South America. The name "Patagonia" evokes romantic images of a windy wilderness at the end of the Earth. Indeed, a recent article in National Geographic described Patagonia as the "wild, wild south," and Conservation International has identified the region as a wilderness and one of "Earth's Last Wild Places" based on its size, low population density, and purported lack of change in vegetation. But what is a wilderness or a wild place? It's an area dominated by natural processes, home to a complete life community, and, for the most part, undisturbed by human activity. Although Patagonia is vast and sparsely populated, and its climate and topography are as harsh and wild as ever, we argue that human activities over the past 100 years have deeply altered the structure and composition of Patagonian wildlife and vegetation communities, and that most of the region is no longer truly wild.