학술논문

Speed of extirpation of the huemul in the history of human occupation in Patagonia.
Document Type
Article
Source
Animal Production Science. 2023, Vol. 63 Issue 16, p1697-1704. 8p.
Subject
*CURRENT distribution
*NUMBERS of species
*WILDLIFE conservation
*SPECIES distribution
*MAXIMUM entropy method
*PROTECTED areas
Language
ISSN
1836-0939
Abstract
Context: The Patagonian huemul, an endangered Odocoilinedeer, has an estimated 350–500 individuals remaining in Argentina. Today's population size, representing a numerical reduction of >99% of original estimates, is fragmented into small groups along ~2000 km of Andean mountains. The species' numbers were heavily reduced by past overexploitation and they disappeared in areas of high anthropogenic activity, predominantly the fertile valley bottoms. Aims: This research delineates the current potential distribution of Patagonian huemul by using climatic indicators, topographic and vegetational proxies, and anthropogenic pressure, to determine the relevance of the climatic envelope on current distribution. Methods: Occurrence records (latitude and longitude) were compiled (n = 159) by consulting the literature. Twenty environmental variables were used (WorldClim database) and two other representative environmental variables (normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI) and enhanced vegetation index (EVI)) were added to test their predictive power. We added the human footprint index (HFP) as a variable to control for model bias. Using the maximum entropy algorithm (MaxEnt), we modelled the species' potential distribution. We designated the historical distribution as area M. Additionally, we calculated three areas of distribution: current, historical and potential. Finally, we calculated distributional retraction of the species and area lost per year. Key results: The model showed good predictive power (AUCTest = 0.764 ± 0.091). However, low values were obtained for AUCtrain and AUCprom for the different predictor scenarios. Although the model shows the interaction among several climatic, environmental, and topographic variables, the human footprint index (39.9%) was the variable that most influenced the current potential distribution of this species. Conclusion: Our model shows that most of Patagonia's surface is climatically suitable for huemul. This suggests that the causes of distributional retraction are not related to limitations imposed by the climate envelope, but rather concur with recent research showing impact owing to the species' behavioural response to anthropogenic activity. Implications: Current populations are small, fragmented, and confined to poor-quality sites. Although the species is currently found mainly within protected areas, management actions must be initiated that promote innovative strategies in unprotected areas, as well as high-value habitats, particularly as protected areas contain limited fertile lower-valley habitats. Different anthropogenic factors heavily reduced the number of the huemul, an endangered Patagonian deer. Our aim was deliminated potencial distribution of huemul by using climatic indicators, topographic, vegetational, and anthropogenic. Our model shows that most of argentine Patagonia is climatically suitable for huemul, suggesting that the causes of the distributional retraction are linked to factors derived from the combination of characteristics of the species' biology and the increased anthropic. Therefore, it is necessary to conduct management and protection actions for species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]