TY - JOUR
T1 - Recovery of black-necked swans, macrophytes and water quality in a Ramsar wetland of southern Chile
T2 - Assessing resilience following sudden anthropogenic disturbances
AU - Jaramillo, Eduardo
AU - Lagos, Nelson A.
AU - Labra, Fabio A.
AU - Paredes, Enrique
AU - Acuña, Emilio
AU - Melnick, Daniel
AU - Manzano, Mario
AU - Velásquez, Carlos
AU - Duarte, Cristian
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to CONAF - Valdivia; especially to the rangers of the wetland Luis Miranda and Roberto Rosas for their assistance in the field and to Mario Maturana (the administrator of the wetland) for his enthusiastic support. This study was primarily supported by Comisión Nacional del Medio Ambiente (CONAMA, Chile) (grant number 1210-1203/2004-12-14 ), Servicio de Evaluación Ambiental (SEA, Chile) and Ministerio del Medio Ambiente (MMA, Chile). Partial financial support was provided by the Company ARAUCO during 2015 and 2016, under the research agreement with the Universidad Austral de Chile to carry out the environmental monitoring program of the wetland. We also acknowledge helpful comments made by two anonymous reviewers to a previous version of the manuscript.
PY - 2018/7/1
Y1 - 2018/7/1
N2 - In 2004 migration and mortality for unknown reasons of the herbivorous Black necked swan (Cygnus melancorhyphus (Molina, 1782)) occurred within the Río Cruces wetland (southern Chile), a Ramsar Site and nature sanctuary. Before 2004, this wetland hosted the largest breeding population of this water bird in the Neotropic Realm. The concurrent decrease in the spatial occurrence of the aquatic plant Egeria densa Planch. 1849 - the main food source of swans - was proposed as a cause for swan migration and mortality. Additionally, post-mortem analyses carried out on swans during 2004 showed diminished body weight, high iron loads and histopathological abnormalities in their livers, suggesting iron storage disease. Various hypotheses were postulated to describe those changes; the most plausible related to variations in water quality after a pulp mill located upstream the wetland started to operate in February 2004. Those changes cascaded throughout the stands of E. densa whose remnants had high iron contents in their tissues. Here we present results of a long-term monitoring program of the wetland components, which show that swan population abundance, body weights and histological liver conditions recovered to pre-disturbance levels in 2012. The recovery of E. densa and iron content in plants throughout the wetland, also returned to pre-disturbance levels in the same 8-year time period. These results show the temporal scale over which resilience and natural restoring processes occur in wetland ecosystems of temperate regions such as southern Chile.
AB - In 2004 migration and mortality for unknown reasons of the herbivorous Black necked swan (Cygnus melancorhyphus (Molina, 1782)) occurred within the Río Cruces wetland (southern Chile), a Ramsar Site and nature sanctuary. Before 2004, this wetland hosted the largest breeding population of this water bird in the Neotropic Realm. The concurrent decrease in the spatial occurrence of the aquatic plant Egeria densa Planch. 1849 - the main food source of swans - was proposed as a cause for swan migration and mortality. Additionally, post-mortem analyses carried out on swans during 2004 showed diminished body weight, high iron loads and histopathological abnormalities in their livers, suggesting iron storage disease. Various hypotheses were postulated to describe those changes; the most plausible related to variations in water quality after a pulp mill located upstream the wetland started to operate in February 2004. Those changes cascaded throughout the stands of E. densa whose remnants had high iron contents in their tissues. Here we present results of a long-term monitoring program of the wetland components, which show that swan population abundance, body weights and histological liver conditions recovered to pre-disturbance levels in 2012. The recovery of E. densa and iron content in plants throughout the wetland, also returned to pre-disturbance levels in the same 8-year time period. These results show the temporal scale over which resilience and natural restoring processes occur in wetland ecosystems of temperate regions such as southern Chile.
KW - Aquatic macrophytes
KW - Herbivorous water birds
KW - Industrial waters
KW - Ramsar site
KW - Southern Chile
KW - Wetlands
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85042096594&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.01.333
DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.01.333
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85042096594
SN - 0048-9697
VL - 628-629
SP - 291
EP - 301
JO - Science of the Total Environment
JF - Science of the Total Environment
ER -