Artículos de revistas
Linking potential biodiversity and three ecosystem services in silvopastoral managed forest landscapes of Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
Fecha
2017-11Registro en:
Martínez Pastur, Guillermo José; Peri, Pablo Luis; Huertas Herrera, Alejandro; Schindler, Stefan; Díaz Delgado, Ricardo; et al.; Linking potential biodiversity and three ecosystem services in silvopastoral managed forest landscapes of Tierra del Fuego, Argentina; Taylor & Francis; International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services and Management; 13; 2; 11-2017; 1-11
2151-3732
2151-3740
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Martínez Pastur, Guillermo José
Peri, Pablo Luis
Huertas Herrera, Alejandro
Schindler, Stefan
Díaz Delgado, Ricardo
Lencinas, María Vanessa
Soler Esteban, Rosina Matilde
Resumen
Several studies confirm that biodiversity loss endangers ecosystem services (ES) supply and human well-being. A better understanding of biodiversity–ES relationships and effects of biodiversity loss on ES supply is needed. The objective was to determine relationships between potential biodiversity and three ES in Patagonia where cattle ranching under silvopastoral use occurs. We used grids of potential biodiversity (plant species richness) and three ES, provisioning (cattle stocking rate), regulating (CO2 sequestration) and cultural (geo-tagged digital-images). Potential biodiversity was negatively related to provisioning, but no significant relations were detected with regulating and cultural. These relations showed regional differences related to forest landscape distribution. High values of regulating were found in southern areas being coincident with high potential biodiversity. Opposite trends (negative relationship with biodiversity) was observed for provisioning in eastern and western regions where provisioning decrease from N-S. Results suggest that provisioning do not overlap spatially with the higher values of potential biodiversity maps, which is an advantage for land use planning when conservation and management requirements must be combined. Our results are the first contribution for Patagonia to underpin scientific and institutional efforts to connect biodiversity conservation with ES maintenance. However, further studies must be addressed including more ES and regions.