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Registro completo
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Biblioteca (s) : |
INIA Las Brujas. |
Fecha : |
20/06/2015 |
Actualizado : |
20/06/2015 |
Tipo de producción científica : |
Informes Agroclimáticos |
Autor : |
GIMENEZ, A.; CASTAÑO, J.; FUREST, J.; AUNCHAYNA, R.; CAL, A.; TISCORNIA, G. |
Afiliación : |
AGUSTIN EDUARDO GIMENEZ FUREST, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; JOSE PEDRO CASTAÑO SANCHEZ, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; JOSE MARIA FUREST CROCCO, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; ROSSINA MARIANA AUNCHAYNA REILLY, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; ADRIAN TABARE CAL ALVAREZ, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; GUADALUPE TISCORNIA TOSAR, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay. |
Título : |
Informe Agroclimático 2011 - Situación a Setiembre. |
Fecha de publicación : |
2011 |
Fuente / Imprenta : |
Montevideo (Uruguay): INIA, 2011. |
Páginas : |
4 p. |
Idioma : |
Español |
Palabras claves : |
AGROCLIMA; AGROCLIMATOLOGÍA; BOLETIN AGROCLIMÁTICO; CARACTERIZACIÓN AGROCLIMÁTICA; DIRECCION VIENTO; ESTACIONES AGROMETEOROLOGICAS; ESTACIONES AUTOMATICAS; ESTACIONES INIA; ESTADO DEL TIEMPO; ESTRÉS HÍDRICO; GRAFICAS AGROCLIMATICOS; GRAS; HELIOFANOGRAFO; INFORMACION SATELITAL; INUNDACIONES; LLUVIAS DIARIAS; MAXIMA; MEDIA; MINIMA; PANEL SOLAR; PERSPECTIVAS CLIMATICAS; PLUVIOMETRO; PRECIPITACION NACIONAL; PREVENCION HELADAS; PRONOSTICO; SENSOR; SIMETRICO; TANQUE A; TERMOCUPLAS; TERMOHIDROGRAFO; VARIABLES AGROCLIMATICAS; VELETA. |
Thesagro : |
AGROCLIMATOLOGIA; CAMBIO CLIMATICO; CLIMA; CLIMATOLOGIA; ESTACIONES METEOROLOGICAS; ESTRES HIDRICO; EVAPORACION; EVAPOTRANSPIRACION; HUMEDAD; HUMEDAD RELATIVA; LLUVIA; METEOROLOGIA; PERSPECTIVAS; PLUVIOMETROS; PRONOSTICO DEL TIEMPO; SENSORES; SISTEMAS; SISTEMAS DE INFORMACION; SUELO; TEMPERATURA; TERMOMETROS. |
Asunto categoría : |
P40 Meteorología y climatología |
URL : |
http://www.ainfo.inia.uy/digital/bitstream/item/4703/1/Inf.Agr.-setiembre-2011.pdf
http://www.inia.uy/Publicaciones/Paginas/publicacion-2333.aspx
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Marc : |
LEADER 02097nam a2200805 a 4500 001 1052859 005 2015-06-20 008 2011 bl uuuu u0uu1 u #d 100 1 $aGIMENEZ, A. 245 $aInforme Agroclimático 2011 - Situación a Setiembre.$h[electronic resource] 260 $aMontevideo (Uruguay): INIA$c2011 300 $a4 p. 650 $aAGROCLIMATOLOGIA 650 $aCAMBIO CLIMATICO 650 $aCLIMA 650 $aCLIMATOLOGIA 650 $aESTACIONES METEOROLOGICAS 650 $aESTRES HIDRICO 650 $aEVAPORACION 650 $aEVAPOTRANSPIRACION 650 $aHUMEDAD 650 $aHUMEDAD RELATIVA 650 $aLLUVIA 650 $aMETEOROLOGIA 650 $aPERSPECTIVAS 650 $aPLUVIOMETROS 650 $aPRONOSTICO DEL TIEMPO 650 $aSENSORES 650 $aSISTEMAS 650 $aSISTEMAS DE INFORMACION 650 $aSUELO 650 $aTEMPERATURA 650 $aTERMOMETROS 653 $aAGROCLIMA 653 $aAGROCLIMATOLOGÍA 653 $aBOLETIN AGROCLIMÁTICO 653 $aCARACTERIZACIÓN AGROCLIMÁTICA 653 $aDIRECCION VIENTO 653 $aESTACIONES AGROMETEOROLOGICAS 653 $aESTACIONES AUTOMATICAS 653 $aESTACIONES INIA 653 $aESTADO DEL TIEMPO 653 $aESTRÉS HÍDRICO 653 $aGRAFICAS AGROCLIMATICOS 653 $aGRAS 653 $aHELIOFANOGRAFO 653 $aINFORMACION SATELITAL 653 $aINUNDACIONES 653 $aLLUVIAS DIARIAS 653 $aMAXIMA 653 $aMEDIA 653 $aMINIMA 653 $aPANEL SOLAR 653 $aPERSPECTIVAS CLIMATICAS 653 $aPLUVIOMETRO 653 $aPRECIPITACION NACIONAL 653 $aPREVENCION HELADAS 653 $aPRONOSTICO 653 $aSENSOR 653 $aSIMETRICO 653 $aTANQUE A 653 $aTERMOCUPLAS 653 $aTERMOHIDROGRAFO 653 $aVARIABLES AGROCLIMATICAS 653 $aVELETA 700 1 $aCASTAÑO, J. 700 1 $aFUREST, J. 700 1 $aAUNCHAYNA, R. 700 1 $aCAL, A. 700 1 $aTISCORNIA, G.
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INIA Las Brujas (LB) |
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| Acceso al texto completo restringido a Biblioteca INIA Las Brujas. Por información adicional contacte bibliolb@inia.org.uy. |
Registro completo
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Biblioteca (s) : |
INIA Las Brujas. |
Fecha actual : |
30/01/2024 |
Actualizado : |
30/01/2024 |
Tipo de producción científica : |
Artículos en Revistas Indexadas Internacionales |
Circulación / Nivel : |
Internacional - -- |
Autor : |
ALDABE, J.; MORÁN-LÓPEZ, T.; SOCA, P.; BLUMETTO, O.; MORALES, J.M. |
Afiliación : |
JOAQUÍN ALDABE, Departamento de Sistemas Agrarios y Paisajes Culturales, Centro Universitario Regional del Este, Universidad de la República, Rocha, Uruguay; Southern Cone Grassland Alliance, Aves Uruguay-BirdLife International, Montevideo, Uruguay; TERESA MORÁN-LÓPEZ, Dpto. Biología de Organismos y Sistemas, Univ. Oviedo & Intst. Mixto de Inv. en Biodiversidad (Univ. de Oviedo-CSIC-Principado de Asturias), Oviedo & Mieres, Spain: Grupo Ecología Cuantitativa, INIBIOMA-CONICET, Univ. Nac. Comahue, Bs.As., Argentina; PABLO SOCA, Ecología del Pastoreo Group, Departamento de Producción Animal y Pasturas, Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay; OSCAR RICARDO BLUMETTO VELAZCO, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria), Uruguay; JUAN MANUEL MORALES, Grupo de Ecología Cuantitativa, INIBIOMA-CONICET, Universidad Nacional del Comahue, Bariloche, Argentina; School of Biodiversity, One Health and Veterinary Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom. |
Título : |
Bird species responses to rangeland management in relation to their traits: Rio de la Plata Grasslands as a case study. |
Fecha de publicación : |
2023 |
Fuente / Imprenta : |
Ecological Applications, 2023, ee2933. https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2933 |
ISSN : |
1051-0761 |
DOI : |
10.1002/eap.2933 |
Idioma : |
Inglés |
Notas : |
Article history: Manuscript received: 25 April 2023; Manuscript revised: 31 August 2023; Manuscript accepted: 04 October 2023; Accepted manuscript online: 20 November 2023; Version of Record online: 20 December 2023. -- Correspondence: Aldabe, J.; Departamento de Sistemas Agrarios y Paisajes Culturales, Centro Universitario Regional del Este, Universidad de la República, Rocha, Uruguay; email:joaquin.aldabe@gmail.com -- Funding: This paper was developed in the context of J. Aldabe PhD at Ciencias Agrarias Postgraduate Program, Agronomy Faculty, Universidad de la República. TML was supported by a Juan de la Cierva Incorporación Fellowship (IJC2020-043765-I) funded by the Spanish Ministery of Science. Funding: International Programs, United States Forest Service and the Neotropical Migratory Bird Conservation Act, United States Fish and Wildlife Service and Fontagro Project. -- Research funding: Fontagro Program, Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agropecuarias, International Programs US Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. -- |
Contenido : |
ABSTRACT.- Areas used for livestock production and dominated by native grasses represent a unique opportunity to reconcile biodiversity conservation and livestock production. However, limited knowledge of individual species' responses to rangeland management restricts our capacity to design grazing practices that favor endangered species and other priority birds. In this work, we applied Hierarchical Modelling of Species Communities (HMSC) to study individual species responses, as well as the influence of traits on such responses, to variables related to rangeland management using birds of the Rio de la Plata Grasslands as a case study. Based on presence-absence data collected in 454 paddocks across 46 ranches we inferred the response of 69 species considering imperfect detection. This degree of detail fills a major gap in rangeland management, as species-level responses can be used to achieve targeted conservation goals other than maximizing richness or abundance. We found that artificial pastures had an overall negative impact on many bird species, whereas the presence of tussocks had a positive effect, including all threatened species. Grassland specialists were in general sensitive to grass height and tended to respond positively to tussocks but negatively to tree cover. Controlling grass height via adjustments in stocking rate can be a useful tool to favor grassland specialists. To favor a wide range of bird species in ranches, a mosaic of short and tall native grasslands with patches of tussocks and trees is desirable. We also found that species-specific responses were modulated by their traits: small-sized birds responded positively to tussocks and tree cover while large species responded negatively to increasing grass height. Ground foragers preferred short grass while birds that scarcely use this stratum were not affected by grass height. Results on the influence of traits on bird responses are an important novelty in relation to previous work in rangelands and potentially increase our predicting capacity and model transferability across grassland regions. © 2023 The Ecological Society of America. MenosABSTRACT.- Areas used for livestock production and dominated by native grasses represent a unique opportunity to reconcile biodiversity conservation and livestock production. However, limited knowledge of individual species' responses to rangeland management restricts our capacity to design grazing practices that favor endangered species and other priority birds. In this work, we applied Hierarchical Modelling of Species Communities (HMSC) to study individual species responses, as well as the influence of traits on such responses, to variables related to rangeland management using birds of the Rio de la Plata Grasslands as a case study. Based on presence-absence data collected in 454 paddocks across 46 ranches we inferred the response of 69 species considering imperfect detection. This degree of detail fills a major gap in rangeland management, as species-level responses can be used to achieve targeted conservation goals other than maximizing richness or abundance. We found that artificial pastures had an overall negative impact on many bird species, whereas the presence of tussocks had a positive effect, including all threatened species. Grassland specialists were in general sensitive to grass height and tended to respond positively to tussocks but negatively to tree cover. Controlling grass height via adjustments in stocking rate can be a useful tool to favor grassland specialists. To favor a wide range of bird species in ranches, a mosaic of short and tall native grasslan... Presentar Todo |
Palabras claves : |
ÁREA DE RECURSOS NATURALES, PRODUCCIÓN Y AMBIENTE - INIA; Body size; Conservation; Foraging behavior; Imperfect detection; Multispecies occupancy models; Native grasses; Target species. |
Asunto categoría : |
P01 Conservación de la naturaleza y recursos de La tierra |
Marc : |
LEADER 04142naa a2200301 a 4500 001 1064446 005 2024-01-30 008 2023 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 022 $a1051-0761 024 7 $a10.1002/eap.2933$2DOI 100 1 $aALDABE, J. 245 $aBird species responses to rangeland management in relation to their traits$bRio de la Plata Grasslands as a case study.$h[electronic resource] 260 $c2023 500 $aArticle history: Manuscript received: 25 April 2023; Manuscript revised: 31 August 2023; Manuscript accepted: 04 October 2023; Accepted manuscript online: 20 November 2023; Version of Record online: 20 December 2023. -- Correspondence: Aldabe, J.; Departamento de Sistemas Agrarios y Paisajes Culturales, Centro Universitario Regional del Este, Universidad de la República, Rocha, Uruguay; email:joaquin.aldabe@gmail.com -- Funding: This paper was developed in the context of J. Aldabe PhD at Ciencias Agrarias Postgraduate Program, Agronomy Faculty, Universidad de la República. TML was supported by a Juan de la Cierva Incorporación Fellowship (IJC2020-043765-I) funded by the Spanish Ministery of Science. Funding: International Programs, United States Forest Service and the Neotropical Migratory Bird Conservation Act, United States Fish and Wildlife Service and Fontagro Project. -- Research funding: Fontagro Program, Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agropecuarias, International Programs US Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. -- 520 $aABSTRACT.- Areas used for livestock production and dominated by native grasses represent a unique opportunity to reconcile biodiversity conservation and livestock production. However, limited knowledge of individual species' responses to rangeland management restricts our capacity to design grazing practices that favor endangered species and other priority birds. In this work, we applied Hierarchical Modelling of Species Communities (HMSC) to study individual species responses, as well as the influence of traits on such responses, to variables related to rangeland management using birds of the Rio de la Plata Grasslands as a case study. Based on presence-absence data collected in 454 paddocks across 46 ranches we inferred the response of 69 species considering imperfect detection. This degree of detail fills a major gap in rangeland management, as species-level responses can be used to achieve targeted conservation goals other than maximizing richness or abundance. We found that artificial pastures had an overall negative impact on many bird species, whereas the presence of tussocks had a positive effect, including all threatened species. Grassland specialists were in general sensitive to grass height and tended to respond positively to tussocks but negatively to tree cover. Controlling grass height via adjustments in stocking rate can be a useful tool to favor grassland specialists. To favor a wide range of bird species in ranches, a mosaic of short and tall native grasslands with patches of tussocks and trees is desirable. We also found that species-specific responses were modulated by their traits: small-sized birds responded positively to tussocks and tree cover while large species responded negatively to increasing grass height. Ground foragers preferred short grass while birds that scarcely use this stratum were not affected by grass height. Results on the influence of traits on bird responses are an important novelty in relation to previous work in rangelands and potentially increase our predicting capacity and model transferability across grassland regions. © 2023 The Ecological Society of America. 653 $aÁREA DE RECURSOS NATURALES, PRODUCCIÓN Y AMBIENTE - INIA 653 $aBody size 653 $aConservation 653 $aForaging behavior 653 $aImperfect detection 653 $aMultispecies occupancy models 653 $aNative grasses 653 $aTarget species 700 1 $aMORÁN-LÓPEZ, T. 700 1 $aSOCA, P. 700 1 $aBLUMETTO, O. 700 1 $aMORALES, J.M. 773 $tEcological Applications, 2023, ee2933. https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2933
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