Botanical Composition and Diet Quality of the Vicuñas (Vicugna vicugna Mol.) in Highland Range of Parinacota, Chile
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Castellaro Galdames, Giorgio
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Botanical Composition and Diet Quality of the Vicuñas (Vicugna vicugna Mol.) in Highland Range of Parinacota, Chile
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Abstract
Understanding the botanical composition of herbivores’ diets and their nutritional quality
is an important question in the development of sustainable strategies for the management of natural
resources. In Chilean highland vicuña-grazed grasslands, there is little information in this regard and,
therefore, this study aimed to determine the year-round profile of the diet’s botanical composition
and quality. In highland grasslands, on an area of 21.9 ha, continuously grazed for 3.06 VU/ha/year
(18 030 S, 69 130 W; 4425 m.o.s.l), twelve feces piles were sampled monthly and were analyzed
through microhistology, and the nitrogen concentration [NF,OMbasis] was determined. The botanical
composition, diversity (J) and selectivity index (Ei) of the main species were estimated. Diets were
composed of dry–grassland grasses (37.7%), wet–grassland grasses (36.6%), graminoids (14.3%) and
forbs (10.2%). The diet diversity ranged from 0.79 (dry–winter) to 0.87 (wet–summer). The main
dominant grassland species obtained negative Ei values. The annual mean value of [NF] was estimated
as 1.82%, with a higher value in summer months (2.21%), which coincides with the physiological
states of higher nutritional demand. The vicuñas behave like generalist ungulates, having a high
degree of selectivity towards grass species, which mostly fulfill a nutritional role in subsistence and a
functional role in survival, applying foraging strategies that allow them to obtain a better quality diet
during the season of greatest nutritional demand.
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Agrarian Innovation Foundation (FIA)
PIT-2008-0189
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Artículo de publicación ISI Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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Animals 2020, 10, 1205
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