Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert

Feral domestic ungulates may compete with the populations of wild herbivores with which they coexist, particularly so in arid regions. The potential competition between wild camelids and feral donkeys at the eastern sector of the Atacama Desert is evaluated in terms of their coincidence or segregation in habitat use and complemented with a comparison of reproductive output (yearling/adult ratio) of vicuna family groups in the proximity vs. distant from donkey observations. Habitat use of wild camelids and donkeys was sampled driving some 1250 km of roads and tracks at the dry and wet seasons. There were 221 vicunas (Vicugna vicugna) sightings, 77 for donkeys (Equus asinus), 25 for guanacos (Lama guanicoe) and 8 for hybrids between guanacos and domestic llamas (Lama glama), as well as 174 randomly selected control locations. By means of Generalised Discriminant Analysis and Analysis of Variance we show that all ungulates actively select their habitat, with significant differences between use and availability in the area. Donkeys are relatively abundant in comparison with camelids and coincide broadly with both of them across the altitudinal gradient, but they fall between them in local scale habitat selection and do not seem to force their displacement from their preferred habitats. Thus donkeys occur preferentially on slopes with a high cover of tall shrubs, whereas vicu as use valley bottoms with grass and guanacos the upper slope zones with grass. The potential for competition between donkeys and wild camelids is thus limited and it does not affect the reproductive output of vicu a in this region. Therefore, with the present knowledge we suggest that population control is not currently merited for feral donkeys.

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Main Authors: Malo, Juan E., González Pérez, Benito, Mata, Cristina, Vielma, Andre, Donoso, Denise S, Fuentes, Nicolás, Estades Marfán, Cristián
Format: Artículo de revista biblioteca
Language:English
Published: ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV 2016-06-23T20:19:05Z
Subjects:Vicugna vicugna, Ungulate, Lama guanicoe, Equus asinus, Hybridization, Competition,
Online Access:http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/139098
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spelling dig-infor-cl-20.500.12220-261922020-06-08T15:33:32Z Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert Malo, Juan E. González Pérez, Benito Mata, Cristina Vielma, Andre Donoso, Denise S Fuentes, Nicolás Estades Marfán, Cristián Vicugna vicugna Ungulate Lama guanicoe Equus asinus Hybridization Competition Feral domestic ungulates may compete with the populations of wild herbivores with which they coexist, particularly so in arid regions. The potential competition between wild camelids and feral donkeys at the eastern sector of the Atacama Desert is evaluated in terms of their coincidence or segregation in habitat use and complemented with a comparison of reproductive output (yearling/adult ratio) of vicuna family groups in the proximity vs. distant from donkey observations. Habitat use of wild camelids and donkeys was sampled driving some 1250 km of roads and tracks at the dry and wet seasons. There were 221 vicunas (Vicugna vicugna) sightings, 77 for donkeys (Equus asinus), 25 for guanacos (Lama guanicoe) and 8 for hybrids between guanacos and domestic llamas (Lama glama), as well as 174 randomly selected control locations. By means of Generalised Discriminant Analysis and Analysis of Variance we show that all ungulates actively select their habitat, with significant differences between use and availability in the area. Donkeys are relatively abundant in comparison with camelids and coincide broadly with both of them across the altitudinal gradient, but they fall between them in local scale habitat selection and do not seem to force their displacement from their preferred habitats. Thus donkeys occur preferentially on slopes with a high cover of tall shrubs, whereas vicu as use valley bottoms with grass and guanacos the upper slope zones with grass. The potential for competition between donkeys and wild camelids is thus limited and it does not affect the reproductive output of vicu a in this region. Therefore, with the present knowledge we suggest that population control is not currently merited for feral donkeys. 2016-06-23T20:19:05Z 2016-06-23T20:19:05Z 2016-06-23T20:19:05Z 2016 Artículo de revista Acta Oecologica 70 (2016) 1-9 DOI: 10.1016/j.actao.2015.11.002 http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/139098 en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/cl/ Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 Chile ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
institution INFOR CL
collection DSpace
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-infor-cl
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del INFOR Chile
language English
topic Vicugna vicugna
Ungulate
Lama guanicoe
Equus asinus
Hybridization
Competition
Vicugna vicugna
Ungulate
Lama guanicoe
Equus asinus
Hybridization
Competition
spellingShingle Vicugna vicugna
Ungulate
Lama guanicoe
Equus asinus
Hybridization
Competition
Vicugna vicugna
Ungulate
Lama guanicoe
Equus asinus
Hybridization
Competition
Malo, Juan E.
González Pérez, Benito
Mata, Cristina
Vielma, Andre
Donoso, Denise S
Fuentes, Nicolás
Estades Marfán, Cristián
Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert
description Feral domestic ungulates may compete with the populations of wild herbivores with which they coexist, particularly so in arid regions. The potential competition between wild camelids and feral donkeys at the eastern sector of the Atacama Desert is evaluated in terms of their coincidence or segregation in habitat use and complemented with a comparison of reproductive output (yearling/adult ratio) of vicuna family groups in the proximity vs. distant from donkey observations. Habitat use of wild camelids and donkeys was sampled driving some 1250 km of roads and tracks at the dry and wet seasons. There were 221 vicunas (Vicugna vicugna) sightings, 77 for donkeys (Equus asinus), 25 for guanacos (Lama guanicoe) and 8 for hybrids between guanacos and domestic llamas (Lama glama), as well as 174 randomly selected control locations. By means of Generalised Discriminant Analysis and Analysis of Variance we show that all ungulates actively select their habitat, with significant differences between use and availability in the area. Donkeys are relatively abundant in comparison with camelids and coincide broadly with both of them across the altitudinal gradient, but they fall between them in local scale habitat selection and do not seem to force their displacement from their preferred habitats. Thus donkeys occur preferentially on slopes with a high cover of tall shrubs, whereas vicu as use valley bottoms with grass and guanacos the upper slope zones with grass. The potential for competition between donkeys and wild camelids is thus limited and it does not affect the reproductive output of vicu a in this region. Therefore, with the present knowledge we suggest that population control is not currently merited for feral donkeys.
format Artículo de revista
topic_facet Vicugna vicugna
Ungulate
Lama guanicoe
Equus asinus
Hybridization
Competition
author Malo, Juan E.
González Pérez, Benito
Mata, Cristina
Vielma, Andre
Donoso, Denise S
Fuentes, Nicolás
Estades Marfán, Cristián
author_facet Malo, Juan E.
González Pérez, Benito
Mata, Cristina
Vielma, Andre
Donoso, Denise S
Fuentes, Nicolás
Estades Marfán, Cristián
author_sort Malo, Juan E.
title Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert
title_short Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert
title_full Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert
title_fullStr Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert
title_full_unstemmed Low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the Chilean desert
title_sort low habitat overlap at landscape scale between wild camelids and feral donkeys in the chilean desert
publisher ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
publishDate 2016-06-23T20:19:05Z
url http://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/139098
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