Vicuna antipredator diel movement drives spatial nutrient subsidies in a high Andean ecosystem
Data files
Jan 16, 2024 version files 292.84 KB
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Monk_isotope_data.xlsx
48.59 KB
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Monk_latrine_counts.xlsx
45.93 KB
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Monk_latrine_cover.xlsx
44.24 KB
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Monk_latrine_diameter.xlsx
39.98 KB
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Monk_plant_nutrient_data.xlsx
48.06 KB
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Monk_soil_nutrient_data.xlsx
59.20 KB
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README.md
6.84 KB
Abstract
Large animals could be important drivers of spatial nutrient subsidies when they ingest resources in some habitats and release them in others, even moving nutrients against elevational gradients. In high Andean deserts, vicuñas (Vicugna vicugna) move daily between nutrient-rich wet meadows, where there is abundant water and forage but high risk of predation by pumas (Puma concolor), and nutrient-poor open plains with lower risk of predation. In all habitats, vicuñas defecate and urinate in communal latrines. We investigated how these latrines impacted soil and plant nutrient concentrations across three habitats in the Andean ecosystem (meadows, plains, and canyons), and used stable isotope analysis to explore the source of fecal nutrients in latrines. Latrine soils had higher concentrations of nitrogen, carbon, and other nutrients than did non-latrine soils across all habitats. These inputs corresponded with an increase in plant quality (lower C:N) at latrine sites in plains and canyons, but not in meadows. Stable isotope mixing models suggest that ~7% of nutrients in plains latrines originated from vegetation in meadows, which is disproportionately higher than the relative proportion of meadow habitat (2.6%) in the study area. In contrast, ~68% of nutrients in meadow latrines appear to originate from plains and canyon vegetation, though these habitats made up nearly 98% of the study area. Vicuña diel movements thus appear to concentrate nutrients in latrines within habitats and to drive cross-habitat nutrient subsidies, with disproportionate transport from low-lying, nutrient-rich meadows to more elevated, nutrient-poor plains. Scaling these results up to the landscape scale, the amount of nitrogen and phosphorus subsidized in soil at plains latrines was of the same order of magnitude as estimates of annual atmospheric nitrogen and phosphorus deposition for this region (albeit far more localized and patchy). Thus, vicuña-mediated nutrient redistribution and deposition appears to be an important process impacting ecosystem functioning in arid Andean environments, on par with other major inputs of nutrients to the system.
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.kh18932dq
Data for “Vicuña anti predator diet movement drives spatial nutrient subsidies in a high Andean ecosystem”, by Monk, J.D., E. Donadio, P.F. Gregorio, and O.J. Schmitz, 2023
Julia D. Monk
Yale University
University of California - Berkeley
Data collected in San Guillermo National Park (SGNP), Argentina, in 2020
Description of the data and file structure
FILES:
Monk_isotope_data.xlsx
Monk_latrine_counts.xlsx
Monk_latrine_cover.xlsx
Monk_latrine_diameter.xlsx
Monk_plant_nutrient_data.xlsx
Monk_soil_nutrient_data.xlsx
Monk_isotope_data.xlsx Dataset used for analyzing vicuña feces and plant material C and N isotopes for stable isotope mixing models
Tab: Mixes (Vicuña feces)
habitat: Habitat of latrine site (Plains = open plains refuge habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Canyons = rocky canyons and mountain slopes, high-predation risk habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Meadows = heavily vegetated wet meadow, nutrient-rich, high-predation risk habitat)
d15N: δ¹⁵N values of vicuña fecal samples (per mil)
d13C: δ¹³C values of vicuña fecal samples (per mil)
Tab: Sources (Plants)
d15N: δ¹⁵N values of plant samples (per mil)
d13C: δ¹³C values of plant samples (per mil)
percentN: % nitrogen content of plant samples
percentC: % carbon content of plant samples
source: Source for isotope mixing models (Plains_and_Canyons: vegetation from arid plains and canyons; Meadows: vegetation from wet meadows)
Monk_latrine_counts.xlsx Dataset used for analyzing the number of latrines per 50 x 50 m plot
plot_id: ID of 50 x 50 m plot
Habitat: Habitat of latrine plot (Plains = open plains refuge habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Canyons = rocky canyons and mountain slopes, high-predation risk habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Meadows = heavily vegetated wet meadow, nutrient-rich, high-predation risk habitat)
latrines: number of vicuña latrines
latitude: latitude of latrine plot
longitude: longitude of latrine plot
Monk_latrine_cover.xlsx Dataset used for analyzing plant cover at vicuña latrines and reference sites
plot_id: ID of 50 x 50 m plot
quadrat_id: ID of plant survey quadrat
treatment: treatment at sampling location (latrine = at a vicuña latrine, ref = reference location > 6 m from a latrine)
poaceae_cover: percent cover of poaceae plants in quadrat
juncaceae_cover: percent cover of juncaceae plants in quadrat
cyperaceae_cover: percent cover of cyperaceae plants in quadrat
fabaceae_cover: percent cover of fabaceae plants in quadrat
ephedraceae_cover: percent cover of ephedraceae plants in quadrat
asteraceae_cover: percent cover of asteraceae plants in quadrat
solanaceae_cover: percent cover of solanaceae plants in quadrat
cactaceae_cover: percent cover of cactaceae plants in quadrat
portulacaceae_cover: percent cover of portulacaceae plants in quadrat
herbaceae_cover: percent cover of herbaceae plants in quadrat
malvaceae_cover: percent cover of malvaceae plants in quadrat
boraginaceae_cover: percent cover of boraginaceae plants in quadrat
verbenaceae_cover: percent cover of verbenaceae plants in quadrat
total_plant: total plant cover in quadrat
habitat: Habitat of latrine plot (Plains = open plains refuge habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Canyons = rocky canyons and mountain slopes, high-predation risk habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Meadows = heavily vegetated wet meadow, nutrient-rich, high-predation risk habitat)
Monk_latrine_diameter.xlsx Dataset used for analyzing the diameter of vicuña latrines
plot_id: ID of 50 x 50 m plot
latrine_id: ID of individual latrines within plots
habitat: Habitat of latrine plot (Plains = open plains refuge habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Canyons = rocky canyons and mountain slopes, high-predation risk habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Meadows = heavily vegetated wet meadow, nutrient-rich, high-predation risk habitat)
diameter: diameter (in meters) of vicuña latrines
fresh: whether or not the latrine appeared fresh (yes = fresh with shiny black fecal pellets; medium = brown fecal pellets, slightly faded from sun; no = latrine appears old with desiccated white-grey fecal pellets)
Monk_plant_nutrient_data.xlsx Dataset used for analyzing plant nutrient data from latrine plots
sample_id: ID of individual sample
treatment: treatment at sampling location (latrine = at a vicuña latrine, ref = reference location > 6 m from a latrine)
plot_id: ID of 50 x 50 m plot
habitat: Habitat of latrine plot (Plains = open plains refuge habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Canyons = rocky canyons and mountain slopes, high-predation risk habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Meadows = heavily vegetated wet meadow, nutrient-rich, high-predation risk habitat)
percentN: % nitrogen content of plant samples
percentC: % carbon content of plant samples
CtoN: carbon to nitrogen ratio of plant samples
Monk_soil_nutrient_data.xlsx Dataset used for analyzing soil nutrient data from latrine plots
sample_id: ID of individual sample
treatment: treatment at sampling location (latrine = at a vicuña latrine, ref = reference location > 6 m from a latrine)
plot_id: ID of 50 x 50 m plot
habitat: Habitat of latrine plot (Plains = open plains refuge habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Canyons = rocky canyons and mountain slopes, high-predation risk habitat, nutrient-poor, sparsely vegetated; Meadows = heavily vegetated wet meadow, nutrient-rich, high-predation risk habitat)
percentN: % nitrogen content of soil samples (NA = sample analysis failed)
percentC: % carbon content of soil samples (NA = sample analysis failed)
notes: notes about sample analysis (NA = no notes)
P: phosphorus concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)
Fe: iron concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)
Ca: calcium concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)
K: potassium concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)
Mg: magnesium concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)
Mn: manganese concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)
Na: sodium concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)
Zn: zinc concentration of sample [mg/kg] (NA = sample accidentally destroyed before successful analysis)