From Pyrenees to Andes: The relationship between transhumant livestock and vultures
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Abandonment Andean condor Griffon vulture Livestock Transhumance
Date
2023-05-01Referencia bibliográfica
E. Arrondo et al. From Pyrenees to Andes: The relationship between transhumant livestock and vultures. Biological Conservation 283 (2023) 110081
Sponsorship
Comunidad de Madrid; La Caixa-Severo Ochoa International PhD Program 2015; Generalitat Valenciana and European Social Fund (APOSTD/2021); Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities Contracts; Junta de Andalucia; Peregrin Fund; ANPCyT Spanish Government PICT 2021-I-A-00484 04/B227; Universidad Nacional del Comahue 04/B227 RTI2018-099609-B-C21-C22; IAATE Conservation Award; Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET); Project TRASCAR P18-RT-1321; Junta de Andalucia TED2021-130005B-C21-C22; Spanish Government; European Commission; Project DIGITALPAST; Plan NextGenerationEU PICT 2014-0725Abstract
Transhumance is the traditional livestock practice consisting in the seasonal movement of herds between winter
and summer pastures. Transhumance have important effects on the ecosystem functions from local to regional
scales. Here, we 1) explored the relationship of vultures to transhumant herds, and 2) tested whether there is a
shift on the use of space by vultures due to the decline of transhumance. For that, we first assessed whether
vultures follow transhumant herds in two mountain areas with transhumant tradition, Pyrenees (Spain) and
Andes (Argentina). Second, we compared both systems to determine whether the impact of transhumance on the
use of space of vultures is greater in the area where transhumance is still relevant (Andes) than where this activity
is in decline (Pyrenees). For this purpose, we analyzed the use of the summer pastures made by 50 griffon
vultures (Gyps fulvus) and 18 Andean condors (Vultur gryphus), as assessed by GPS tracking. Our findings showed
that both species respond to transhumance by making greater use of summer pastures when herds are present. A
higher proportion of condors made use of summer pastures than griffons, and condors individually made a more
intense use of it than griffons. Differences could be explained by the fact that transhumance in the Andes is still
important while in the Pyrenees is declining and the amount of carrion provided is lower. Given that the
abandonment of traditional activities is a phenomenon underway, it is urgent to evaluate the effects it will have
on biodiversity conservation