Año: 2017
Autor: José Tomás Ibarra, Tomás A. Altamirano, Alejandra Vermehren, F.,Hernán Vargas and Kathy Martin
Línea: Sustentabiliadad de Sistemas Socio-ecológicos
Palabras Clave: Rufous-legged Owl; Strix rufipes; Chimango Caracara; Milvago chimango; behavior; breeding; Chile; nest; predation; snags.
Tipo de publicación: Libro
Publicado en: Bio One. https://bioone.org/journals/Journal-of-Raptor-Research/volume-51/issue-1/JRR-16-68.1/Observations-of-a-Tree-cavity-Nest-of-the-Rufous-legged/10.3356/JRR-16-68.1.short
Título: Observations of a Tree-cavity Nest of the Rufous-legged Owl and Predation of an Owl Nestling by a Chimango Caracara in Andean Temperate Forests

José Tomás Ibarra, Tomás A. Altamirano, Alejandra Vermehren, F.,Hernán Vargas and Kathy Martin

 

Andean temperate ecosystems have lower avian species richness than other temperate, subtropical, and Andean forest types, but they contain many endemic species (e.g., 41% for birds; Vuilleumier 1985). Because of its high concentration of endemism and exceptional loss of native forest habitat (approximately 70%), the Andean temperate ecosystem is classified as a Global Biodiversity Hotspot (Myers et al. 2000). The Rufous-legged Owl (Strix rufipes) is an endemic forest-specialist raptor once considered one of the least-known owls in South America; this species has declining populations because of increasing habitat loss (Mart´ınez and Jaksic 1996). Recent studies have shown that this species tolerates some habitat disturbance, but still requires a complex forest-stand structure comprising large, decaying trees, dead standing trees (snags), and a dense understory (Ibarra et al. 2014b, Ibarra and Martin 2015). Rufous-legged Owls in temperate forests are sit-and-wait predators with a diet composed mainly of arboreal and scansorial small mammals, but also smaller proportions of forest passerines and invertebrates (Mart´ınez 1993,Mart´ınez and Jaksic 1997, Figueroa et al. 2006, 2016). The few reported nests described for Rufous-legged Owls include one likely unusual nest on the ground in a pine (Pinus radiata) plantation (Estades 1998), and six cavity nests in large, decaying native trees (Vukasovic et al. 2006, Wallace 2010, Beaudoin and Ojeda 2011). In all these cases, however, information on Rufous-legged Owl nesting activity (e.g., incubation period, adult parental behavior, prey consumption) and nest fate was lacking.

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Año: 2019
Autor: Fausto Sarmiento, José Tomás Ibarra, Antonia Barreau, Carla Marchant, Juan González, Manuel Oliva and Mario Donoso
Línea: Sustentabiliadad de Sistemas Socio-ecológicos
Palabras Clave: Heirloom, sacred food, sacred transition, foodhub, agrobiodiversity, mountain foodscape
Tipo de publicación: Artículo
Publicado en: Journal of Agriculture Food and Development, https://doi.org/10.30635/2415-0142.2019.05.2
Título: Montology: A Research Agenda for Complex Foodscapes and BioCultural Microrefugia in Tropical and Temperate Andes

Fausto Sarmiento, José Tomás Ibarra, Antonia Barreau, Carla Marchant, Juan González, Manuel Oliva and Mario Donoso 

There is a growing trend for inclusion of the food sovereignty dimension as a driving force of biodiversity conservation in mountain production landscapes. This is particularly important when dealing with agrobiodiversity in the tropical and temperate Andes, whereby complex agricultural systems and domesticates have incorporated ethnographic overtones in food production and consumption. One segment of this new imperative relates to foodstuff associated with rituals or religious practices and community-based observance of heirloom varieties and recipes of Andean food staples. These foods include specialty corn staples, potato races, quinoa varieties, rare lupines, and a collection of tropical fruits, seeds and fibers, including plants and animals, as former elements of a continuous forest cover that has now been reduced to patches amidst the herbaceous matrix of the Páramo, Jalca, Puna and temperate highlands. By using case studies of mountain foodscapes of the tropical and temperate Andes, changes to the foodscape narrative for vernacular culture-nature sustainability are suggested, making specific reference to field observations and research projects conducted in these regions. As global environmental change lures closer in the mountain development horizon, the stewardship of heirloom practices should be highlighted, and the cultivation of respect and observance of Andean traditions with syncretic undertones, found in historical and contemporary foodscapes of the tropical and temperate Andes, must be observed. For this, using the Montology framework as a way to fuse Western science (WS) with Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK), new research agendas are devised via transdisciplinary applications in the complex socio-ecological production landscapes (SEPLS) of the Andes, concluding the need of managing them as foodscapes deserving protection as biocultural microrefugia.

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Año: 2017
Autor: José Tomás Ibarra, Michaela Martin1, Kristina L. Cockle & Kathy Martin
Línea: Sustentabiliadad de Sistemas Socio-ecológicos
Tipo de publicación: Artículo
Publicado en: Nature, Scientific Reports
Título: Maintaining ecosystem resilience: functional responses of tree cavity nesters to logging in temperate forests of the Americas

José Tomás Ibarra, Michaela Martin1, Kristina L. Cockle & Kathy Martin

 

Logging often reduces taxonomic diversity in forest communities, but little is known about how this biodiversity loss affects the resilience of ecosystem functions. We examined how partial logging and clearcutting of temperate forests influenced functional diversity of birds that nest in tree cavities. We used point-counts in a before-after-control-impact design to examine the effects of logging on the value, range, and density of functional traits in bird communities in Canada (21 species) and Chile (16 species). Clearcutting, but not partial logging, reduced diversity in both systems. The effect was much more pronounced in Chile, where logging operations removed critical nesting resources (large decaying trees), than in Canada, where decaying aspen Populus tremuloides were retained on site. In Chile, logging was accompanied by declines in species richness, functional richness (amount of functional niche occupied by species), community-weighted body mass (average mass, weighted by speciesdensities), and functional divergence (degree of maximization of divergence in occupied functional niche). In Canada, clearcutting did not affect species richness but nevertheless reduced functional richness and community-weighted body mass. Although some cavity-nesting birds can persist under intensive logging operations, their ecosystem functions may be severely compromised unless future
nest trees can be retained on logged sites.

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