A long-term study of vertebrate predator responses to an El Nino (ENSO) disturbance in western South America

Jaksic, FM; Silva, SI; Meserve, PL; Gutierrez, JR

Abstract

We analyzed the putative effects of the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) of 1991-92 in a semi-arid locality of northern Chile. We obtained 30 months of pre ENSO data, followed by 36 months of peak and post ENSO data (total = 5.5 yr). The rainy winter of 1991 resulted in a three-fold increase in total seed bank (perennial and ephemerals pooled) and in ephemeral (but not perennial) herb cover. Seed and herbage eaters (rodents) irrupted to population levels ca 20 times higher during the breeding season of 1991 than the preceding wintering season. Diurnal carnivorous predators (hawks, owls, and foxes) showed a delayed response to the irruption, increasing from seven individuals sighted during the wintering season of 1991 to 13 during the wintering season of 1992. A seemingly counterclockwise trajectory of predator abundance versus prey levels suggested a pattern of prey-driven dynamics, but confidence intervals were likely broad. In this semiarid locality, it appears that ENSO effects did not cascade down from higher to lower trophic levels, but rather the opposite. In this bottom-up scenario, we predict that as primary productivity varies with rainfall, so should secondary (mammal prey densities), and tertiary productivity (vertebrate predators). Long-term monitoring of this terrestrial ecosystem is needed to test this prediction.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:A1997WJ76900016 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: OIKOS
Volumen: 78
Número: 2
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 1997
Página de inicio: 341
Página final: 354
DOI:

10.2307/3546302

Notas: ISI