Title of article :
Habitat use by endangered huemul (Hippocamelus bisulcus): cattle, snow, and the problem of multiple causes Original Research Article
Abstract :
Habitat use by huemul (Hippocamelus bisulcus), an endangered deer, was studied at two adjacent periglacial sites of south-coastal Chile. Fiordo Témpano (cattle site) was cattle-free in 1990, after a winter of little snow, but 20 cattle were concentrated on its 2.7 km2 grassland in 1995, after a winter of deeper snow. Estero Bernardo (control site) was cattle-free and studied in 1995 only. During spring at the cattle site, deer were observed using rocky slopes both years but grassland in 1990 only. During spring at the control site, deer used rocky slopes and grassland-type habitats daily. At the cattle site, fecal pellet-group densities suggested that winter use of grassland was substantial during 1990 only, and winter use of old-growth forest relative to grassland was much greater in 1995 than in 1990. At the control site, pellet-group densities suggested that winter use of grassland-type habitats was greater than of old-growth forest. Cattle, a concomitant increase in hunting, and snow likely contributed to habitat use differences between years at the cattle site. Although my study could not untangle the relative contributions of multiple causes, results cautiously suggest that excluding cattle from periglacial sites may be important to conserve huemul, and that winter use of old-growth forest should be a research priority.
Keywords :
Huemul , South-coastal Chile , cattle , Habitat use , Hippocamelus bisulcus