Publicaciones
The Status of Kelp Exploitation and Marine Agronomy, with Emphasis on Macrocystis pyrifera, in Chile.
Buschmann, A., Prescott, S., Potin, P., Faugeron, S., Vásquez, J., & Camus, C. et al.
Kelp cultivation started in Japan, China and Korea, mainly for human consumption; new applications are still expanding. In Chile, three ‘wild’ Lessonia species and Macrocystis pyrifera are under a strong and increasing pressure of exploitation mainly for alginate production and as a source of feed for abalone. Regulatory restrictions for kelp exploitation and the increased demand for biomass provided a positive environment for the installation of a kelp farming industry. Pilot-production studies demonstrated that 200 tonnes (fresh)/ha/year can be achieved and genetic diversity and breeding studies suggested that this volume could be increased. Kelp disease research is a necessary condition for securing the future development of this industry, as are environmental studies on the impacts of large-scale aquaculture. Beyond the positive bioremediation, ecosystem service effects that kelp farming can provide, especially in a region such as in southern Chile, where intensive salmon and mussel cultivation occurs. Life Cycle Assessment suggests that the energy returns on investment in kelp farming are positive, but more detailed data are still required.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Kelp exploitation and farming; Life cycle assessment; Macrocystis pyrifera; Seaweed diseases; Seaweed farming environmental impacts.
Rivers as a source of marine litter – A study from the SE Pacific.
Rech, S., Macaya-Caquilpán, V., Pantoja, J., Rivadeneira, M., Jofre Madariaga, D., & Thiel, M.
Composition and abundance of persistent buoyant litter (plastics, polystyrene and manufactured wood) were investigated at riversides and on adjacent coastal beaches of four rivers flowing into the SE Pacific Ocean. Persistent buoyant litter made up the main share of litter at riversides (36–82%) and on coastal beaches near the river mouths (67–86%). The characteristic litter composition of each river is attributable to human influences along its course. Riverine litter items were deposited to both sides of the river mouths on coastal beaches, and their abundance generally declined with distance from the river mouth. However, maximum litter accumulations were often found on beaches north of the river mouth, suggesting a long-term influence of the prevailing equatorward low-level jet along the Chilean coast. The results confirm that riverine transport has an important impact on litter abundances on coastal beaches.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Riverine litter; Litter composition; Litter abundance; Marine beaches; Riversides.
Genetic diversity of Colobanthus quitensis across the Drake Passage.
Acuña-Rodríguez, I., Oses, R., Cortés-Vasquez, J., Torres-Díaz, C., & Molina-Montenegro, M.
The Drake Passage arises as a likely route for gene flow into Antarctica, as it is the shortest path between this continent and the rest of the world. Despite this, long-distance dispersion into Antarctica could be particularly complex for terrestrial biota. To compare the levels of genetic diversity between Antarctic and South American populations of the Antarctic pearlwort, Colobanthus quitensis, we conducted the first estimation of genetic diversity in this species using amplified fragment length polymorphism. Four populations across the Drake Passage were selected and their genetic composition was characterized. Differences among the levels of genetic diversity were found between the populations analysed as well as between their allelic identities. However, interestingly, their spatial distribution across the Drake Passage suggests a north-to-south gradient of increasing genetic diversity.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: AFLP, Antarctic vascular plants, Colobanthus quitensis, genetic diversity.
Antarctic macrolichen modifies microclimate and facilitates vascular plants in the maritime Antarctica – a reply to Casanova-Katny et al.
Molina-Montenegro, M., Torres-Díaz, C., & Gianoli, E.
In a current article in the Journal of Vegetation Science, Casanova-Katny et al. addressed a comment about an article by Molina-Montenegro et al., which demonstrated the climate modification induced by the macrolichen Usnea antarctica and its role as facilitator. They provided useful corrections concerning species identification and pointed out several issues that, in their view, weakened our study. They indicated that the role of U. antarctica as a facilitative species in the maritime Antarctica is merely philosophical and has no ecological relevance. In this commentary, we argue why these critiques are unsubstantial, and provide evidence that the macrolichen can modify the microclimate, ameliorating the harsh conditions prevailing in Antarctica, establishing positive interactions and eventually facilitating vascular species. Thus, the macrolichen U. antarctica would act as a ‘nurse species’, playing a key role in structuring the maritime Antarctic plant community.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Antarctica; Deschampsia Antarctica; Facilitation; Nurse effect; Positive interactions.
Collaboration and knowledge networks in coastal resources management: How critical stakeholders interact for multiple-use marine protected area implementation.
Cárcamo, P., Garay-Flühmann, R., & Gaymer, C.
Recent studies have shown that social networks and their properties are key in the search for explanations for the success in the governance and management of natural resources. We investigated the structure and properties of inter-organizational social networks involved in the use and management of natural resources in a coastal marine ecosystem in northern Chile proposed as a possible marine protected area. We explored two network configurations: i) relations of collaboration and ii) relations of transfer and exchange of scientific knowledge and information useful to the management of natural resources and the decision-making process involved. Both networks showed little cohesion, with low values of centralization and density indicating a low flow of collaborative and exchange relations among different stakeholders. The knowledge network achieved greater levels of centralization than the collaboration network. National government agencies and fishermen organizations were the most powerful stakeholders in the collaboration network. National government agencies and universities were the most powerful stakeholders in the knowledge network. We found a disconnected network when analyzing the flows of collaboration and knowledge between different administrative operation levels that potentially would hamper the governance of this area. On the other hand, we identified stakeholders that would help to connect the network (bridging stakeholders). Additional analysis of stakeholders using influence-capacity matrix allowed us to identify key stakeholders for planning and implementing the new marine protected area, compare results with the network analysis, and propose network interventions. We propose combining Social Network Analysis with other methods of stakeholder analysis to produce more practical and implementable results. Our results are relevant for future interventions aimed at improving or implementing management and governance of coastal areas.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves:
Impact of grazing by the sea urchin Tetrapygus niger on the kelp Lessonia trabeculata in Northern Chile.
Perreault, M., Borgeaud, I., & Gaymer, C.
The ability of sea urchins to destroy kelp forests, leaving large areas stripped of vegetation and covered by sparse calcareous algae is well known. The reduction in active predators of sea urchins combined with their broad diet makes them an important factor in the structuring of subtidal benthic marine systems. In central and northern Chile, the sea urchin Tetrapygus niger is known to reduce the spread of the subtidal kelp Lessonia trabeculata. However, its impact on the different development stages of L. trabeculata has never been quantified or compared to other possible causes of the loss of material. The objective of this study was to quantify the grazing impact of T. niger on L. trabeculata at different stages of development (recruits, juveniles and adults). An exclusion experiment was conducted to evaluate the grazing effect of T. niger on kelp recruitment within a kelp bed, and kelp transplant experiments were conducted to quantify T. niger's impact on the stipes and fronds of juvenile and adult L. trabeculata. Our results showed that under natural sea urchin densities (10 ind. m− 2), T. niger prevented the recruitment of L. trabeculata. Tetrapygus niger completely consumed juvenile plants but only attacked the stipes of adult plants. Tetrapygus niger seems to use different feeding strategies depending on the ontogeny of the plant. Lessonia trabeculata seems unable to defend itself against the impact of intensive grazing by sea urchins, which may be the primary source of mortality of recruits and juveniles of L. trabeculata. However, T. niger's impact on adult plants is limited and shared with other herbivores that graze the fronds, such as fishes and spider crabs.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Chile; Herbivory; Lessonia trabeculata; Rocky subtidal; Sea urchin–kelp interaction; Tetrapygus niger.
Twelve Years of Change in Coastal Upwelling along the Central-Northern Coast of Chile: Spatially Heterogeneous Responses to Climatic Variability.
Aravena, G., Broitman, B., & Stenseth, N.
We use time-series analyses to characterize the effects of recent climate variability upon the local physical conditions at 11 study sites along the northern-central coast of Chile (29–34°S). Environmental indices show that the 1° Bakun upwelling index in this coastal region has fluctuated in time, starting from a stable period around the 1980's, peaking during the mid 90s, decreasing during the next ten years and increasing at a steep rate since 2010. Upwelling intensity decreased with increasing latitude, showing also a negative correlation with climate patterns (El Niño3 sea surface temperature-SST anomalies and the Multivariate El Niño Index). We hypothesize that the impacts of climate variability on upwelling events seem to be spatially heterogeneous along the region. Non-sheltered locations and, particularly, sites on prominent headlands show an immediate (lag = 0) and negative correlation between local SST, upwelling events and wind stress. We suggest that near-shore thermal conditions are closely coupled to large-scale forcing of upwelling variability and that this influence is modulated through local topographic factors.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Chile (country), Surface temperature, Oceanography, El Niño-Southern Oscillation, Summer, Latitude, Seasons, Ocean temperature.
Succession in intertidal mussel bed assemblages on different shores: species mobility matters.
Valdivia, N., Buschbaum, C., & Thiel, M.
Biogenic substrata such as epibenthic mussel aggregations are common in coastal regions worldwide and harbour diverse assemblages of sessile and mobile species. However, colonisation patterns on biogenic substrata are still not well understood. We tested whether succession develops as a linear sequence of temporal changes in the species richness and community structure of sessile and mobile assemblages associated with intertidal mussel beds of sedimentary and rocky shores in Germany and Chile, respectively. Because of their broad differences, these study sites were analysed separately to examine whether similar successional patterns occur under differing environmental conditions and species pools. At each study site, we conducted an experiment that separates the effects of successional age (deployment duration) and the time when settlement substrata are deployed (deployment timing). Colonisation dynamics differed between timings and between sessile and mobile species. In addition, timing effects were stronger at the sedimentary than at the rocky study site. For sessile organisms, for example, species richness increased steadily with successional age at both study sites, but at the sedimentary site, the magnitude of this increase varied between the different months of deployment. For mobile organisms, a high proportion of the total species pool colonised the settlement substrata within the first month of deployment at both sites. After this initial colonization peak, mobile species richness showed a minor but significant increase with successional age at both sites. We suggest that species dispersal ability at the local scale (mobility) mediates the response of species-rich assemblages to natural and anthropogenic disturbances.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Context-dependency, Determinism, Facilitation, Hard-bottom, Soft-bottom, Stochastic, Succession.
Major consequences of minor damage: impacts of small grazers on fast-growing kelps.
Poore, A., Gutow, L., F. Pantoja, J., Tala, F., Jofré Madariaga, D., & Thiel, M.
Damage by small herbivores can have disproportionately large effects on the fitness of individual plants if damage is concentrated on valuable tissues or on select individuals within a population. In marine systems, the impact of tissue loss on the growth rates of habitat-forming algae is poorly understood. We quantified the grazing damage by an isopod Amphoroidea typa on two species of large kelps, Lessonia spicata and Macrocystis pyrifera, in temperate Chile to test whether non-lethal grazing damage could reduce kelp growth rates and photosynthetic efficiency. For L. spicata, grazing damage was widespread in the field, unevenly distributed on several spatial scales (among individuals and among tissue types) and negatively correlated with blade growth rates. In field experiments, feeding by A. typa reduced the concentration of photosynthetic pigments and led to large reductions (~80 %) in blade growth rates despite limited loss of kelp biomass (0.5 % per day). For M. pyrifera, rates of damage in the field were lower and high densities of grazers were unable to reduce growth rates in field experiments. These results demonstrate that even low per capita grazing rates can result in large reductions in the growth of a kelp, due the spatial clustering of herbivores in the field and the selective removal of photosynthetically active tissues. The impacts of small herbivores on plant performance are thus not easily predicted from consumption rates or abundance in the field, and vary with plant species due to variation in their ability to compensate for damage.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Grazing, Herbivory, Isopods, Lessonia, Mesograzers, Macroalgae, Macrocystis, Plant–herbivore interactions.
On the use of Standardized Drought Indices under decadal climate variability: Critical assessment and drought policy implications.
Núñez, J., Rivera, D., Oyarzún, R., & Arumí, J.
Since the recent High Level Meeting on National Drought Policy held in Geneva in 2013, a greater concern about the creation and adaptation of national drought monitoring systems is expected. Consequently, backed by international recommendations, the use of Standardized Drought Indices (SDI), such as the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI), as an operational basis of drought monitoring systems has been increasing in many parts of the world. Recommendations for the use of the SPI, and consequently, those indices that share its properties, do not take into account the limitations that this type of index can exhibit under the influence of multidecadal climate variability. These limitations are fundamentally related to the lack of consistency among the operational definition expressed by this type of index, the conceptual definition with which it is associated and the political definition it supports. Furthermore, the limitations found are not overcome by the recommendations for their application. This conclusion is supported by the long-term study of the Standardized Streamflow Index (SSI) in the arid north-central region of Chile, under the influence of multidecadal climate variability. The implications of the findings of the study are discussed with regard to their link to aspects of drought policy in the cases of Australia, the United States and Chile.
Año: 2014
Palabras claves: Multidecadal climate variability; Drought; Standardized Precipitation Index; Drought policy; Pacific Decadal Oscillation; Arid zones.