Hi My Friends: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., Camanchaca, or coastal fog, drapes the mountains of coastal
north-central Chile, supporting remnants of a Valdivian temperate
rainforest. The forest is a legacy of the last glacial period.
Añadir l |
Camanchaca, or coastal fog, drapes the mountains of coastal
north-central Chile, supporting remnants of a Valdivian temperate
rainforest. The forest is a legacy of the last glacial period.
Surrounding
the rainforest is coastal matorral habitat. In this thorn-scrub zone,
shrubs brandish spines to protect themselves from being eaten by
herbivores.
Meros, or giant shrike-tyrants; degus, small mammals
active in daytime; and giant hummingbirds live in the matorral's tangled
vegetation.
The Chilean matorral is part of a biome known as
"Mediterranean forests, woodlands and scrub." It covers central Chile,
with the Pacific Ocean just to its west. To its north lies the
dry-as-dust Atacama Desert, which separates the matorral from the
tropical forests of northern South America.
Braving the
thorn-scrub are scientists Douglas Kelt, Andrew Engilis, Jr., and Robert
Walsh of the University of California at Davis; Peter Meserve of
Northern Illinois University; Juan Monardez of the Institute of Ecology
and Biodiversity in Santiago, Chile; and Julio Gutierrez of the
Universidad de La Serena in Chile.
They work in the coastal
matorral, making their way through low, soft scrublands that extend from
La Serena in the north to Valparaiso in the south.
Coastal
mattoral, says Kelt, is similar to the coastal sage scrub of southern
California. Typical flowers are daisies and wild fuchsias.
The
team is studying the seasonal patterns of birds in the matorral of
Chile's Bosque de Fray Jorge National Park. The park is perhaps
best-known for its Valdivian temperate rainforests. The camanchacas that hang on the mountain slopes allow the forests to survive despite their arid surroundings.
Birdlife in the rainforests--and in the matorral--is abundant in this biodiversity hotspot.
The
scientists published results of six years of research on the avian
fauna of Bosque de Fray Jorge's matorral in a recent issue of the
journal The Condor.
Birds identified as permanent
residents, summer or winter visitors, or migrants passing through
included the dark-faced ground tyrant, band-winged nightjar, giant
hummingbird and green-backed firecrown. In total, the researchers
recorded 56 bird species.
In a comparison of summer and winter
seasons, the researchers discovered that bird diversity varied greatly
in the park. "Eighteen species constituted a core group of residents in
almost all our surveys," says Kelt, the paper's lead author, "but at
least another 15 species were nomadic or migratory."
The site supported more insect-eating birds in winter, but more seed-eaters and generalist-feeders during the breeding season.
The
avifauna of the Fray Jorge thorn-scrub may be largely made up of
insectivores and seed-eaters, but it also includes some birds that are
carnivorous, among them the aplomado falcon, cinereous harrier and
short-eared owl.
Last but certainly not least, says Engilis, a
single piscivore, or fish-eater, was spotted: the Peruvian booby. "This
marine forager isn't a typical element of the thorn-scrub fauna,
however," he says.
Rainfall at the site fluctuated over the
study's six years, "but the change was minor compared with that caused
by El Nino over the 20-year duration of our research," says Engilis.
"This
study relies on long-term observations to reveal key ecological
characteristics of bird communities in a biodiversity hotspot in
northern Chile," says Saran Twombly, program director in the National
Science Foundation (NSF)'s Division of Environmental Biology, which
funded the research.
"The results provide the foundation needed to
evaluate the effects of climate variation, such as El Nino events, and
of human-induced climate change, on both local and global biodiversity."
Although
the scientists documented many species that are seasonally abundant,
says Kelt, "what's not clear is whether these species are nomadic
wanderers or truly migratory--or where they go when they leave the
park."
Migration isn't as common in South America as in North
America, says Meserve, in part because of the smaller area of temperate
habitat. But many species in Chile move "latitudinally, altitudinally,
or across the Andes with the seasons."
Birds at Fray Jorge likely
migrate across both altitudes and latitudes. Some species, such as the
white-crested elania and rufous-tailed plantcutter move across
latitudes. During banding efforts in 2008, both species were found with
large fat reserves reminiscent of North American migratory species
covering long distances, says Engilis.
Learning more about South American migration patterns should be a priority, say the scientists.
The
effects of climate change are on the horizon. New insights are
important, the researchers believe, for current and future conservation
and management decisions for Bosque de Fray Jorge National Park, and for
other such biodiversity hotspots.
Cheryl
Dybas, NSF.Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
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