17 research outputs found
Fuegos controlados-parámetros para determinar la conveniencia del uso de fuegos controlados sobre las pasturales naturales
Fuegos controlados-parámetros para determinar la conveniencia del uso de fuegos controlados sobre las pasturales naturale
Estados Unidos - Paraguay: la expansión imperial en la periferia del Cono Sur
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A test of the use of NDVI data to predict secondary productivity
Question: How well does the use of NDVI predict secondary productivity at landscape scales? What is the influence of vegetation quality and phenology over secondary productivity? Location: Magellanic steppe in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. (52°45′ to 54°S, 68°15′ to 67°30′ W). Methods: Monthly and yearly integrated NDVI (NDVI-I) were calculated from AVHRR/NOAA 14, as estimators of phenology and aerial net primary productivity respectively. From a vegetation map we obtained the proportional cover of different physiognomic types and calculated the palatable fraction (forage) productivity that were used as estimators of vegetation quality. Data were analysed through correlations and regressions. Results: NDVI-I was not related with secondary productivity indices, while December and annual maximum NDVI, proportion of lawns and tussock grasslands and forage productivity were positively related with secondary productivity. A negative relationship was found between the proportion of heathlands and secondary productivity, but a positive relationship between heathland's proportion and NDVI-I was found. Conclusions: NDVI-I is not a good predictor of secondary productivity at the scale of our study. These results could be due to: (1) NDVI-I is not related to primary productivity and (2) primary productivity is not related to secondary productivity.Fil: Posse Beaulieu, Gabriela. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria. Centro de Investigación de Recursos Naturales. Instituto de Clima y Agua; ArgentinaFil: Cingolani, Ana María. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas Físicas y Naturales. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal; Argentin
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Landscape heterogeneity and long-term animal production in Tierra del Fuego
Grasslands of northern Tierra del Fuego sustain 1 sheep/ha and are very extensively managed, with flocks roaming freely in large paddocks (2,000-4,000 ha). This system requires knowledge of landscape-level constraints and influences upon production for decision making. On a typical sheep ranch we checked upland floristic gradients against 30-years records of animal production. Community types and landscape units were surveyed and mapped. Using gradient analysis techniques we obtained animal production differences at the landscape scale that were strongly related to a vegetation gradient associated with soil fertility. Extensive and strongly variable lithological mantles allowed expression of the fertility gradient at that scale. Landscapes with fertile soils and neutrophilous community types were best for sheep breeding. These landscapes produced a mean of 37% more lambs ha-1 yr-1 than lands with soils of intermediate fertility and slightly acidophilous community types, and 116% more lambs ha-1 yr-1 than lands with highly infertile soils and highly acidophilous vegetation. Contrarily, the soil moisture gradient, being mainly expressed at the topographic scale, was not related with sheep production records. A forage gradient which was identified behind the fertility gradient supported our findings. Poa spp., the main item in sheep diets, and other important forage species attained the highest covers in neutrophilous community types. With the range in proportion of lowlands present in this ranch (12 to 30%), no relationship was found between the percentage of hygrophitic vegetation in the landscape and animal production.The Journal of Range Management archives are made available by the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact [email protected] for further information.Migrated from OJS platform August 202
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Seasonal diets of sheep in the steppe region of Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
Sheep diets were determined seasonally for large flocks grazing year-round in 2 landscape types of the Magellanic steppe of Argentina. A tussock-grass steppe of Festuca gracillima Hooker f. dominates the uplands of the whole area. On acid soils (Quaternary landscape), woody variants of the steppe prevail; on neutral soils (Tertiary landscape), woody plants are almost absent and short grasses and fortes are abundant. Principal taxa consumed throughout the year were: Poa L., Deschampsia P.Beauv., and "sedges &rushes". Consumption of woody species and of the dominant tussock-grass Festuca gracillima increased notably in winter. Despite the large proportion of species in common, diets differed significantly between landscapes. In the Quaternary landscape, which has a higher botanical diversity, diets were more dissimilar among seasons and had a higher annual diversity index. Because of their different composition of forage types the 2 landscapes differed in their overall grazing value. The Tertiary landscape, with a low floristic diversity but richer in highly preferred species as Poa spp. would be a more risky grazing area in winter, when an ice sheet or a snow cover limits harvesting of the lower layer of short grasses and forbs.The Journal of Range Management archives are made available by the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact [email protected] for further information.Migrated from OJS platform August 202