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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Rivadeneira, Marcelo M."

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    Food habits of the barn owl Tyto alba in the National Reserve Pampa del Tamarugal, Atacama Desert, North Chile
    (2006) Carmona, Erico R.; Rivadeneira, Marcelo M.
    In the present study the diet of the barn owl Tyto alba was analysed in the ecosystem of Pampa del Tamarugal, in the Atacama Desert, northern Chile. The area is characterised by extremely dry conditions, and relatively homogeneous and poor vegetation, dominated mainly by tamarugo forests (Prosopis tamarugo). The results indicated that small mammals were the greatest proportion (76.2%) in the diet of the barn owl, which predated only four species, of which the rodent Phyllotis darwini (approximately 62%) represented the major proportion. Nevertheless, reptiles and arthropods were also relevant prey for the barn owl, with a proportion of 5% and 15.1%, respectively. The general dietary composition of the tamarugos barn owl showed a wide-ranging diet pattern, characterised mainly by a poor diversity of small mammals and a significant consumption of reptiles and arthropods, in contrast to the sites in the central region and south Chile, where the diet included a greater diversity of small mammals, especially rodents. This pattern might reflect the conditions of extreme aridity, and low primary productivity in the ecosystem of Pampa del Tamarugal, restricting the abundance and diversity of the preferential prey (e.g. rodents). Hence, T. alba tends to increase its trophic diversity, adding other kinds of alternative prey to compensate for the low proportion of preferential prey available in the field.
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    FROM THE PACIFIC TO THE TROPICAL FORESTS: NETWORKS OF SOCIAL INTERACTION IN THE ATACAMA DESERT, LATE IN THE PLEISTOCENE
    (2019) Santoro, Calogero M.; Gayo, Eugenia M.; Capriles, Jose M.; Rivadeneira, Marcelo M.; Herrera, Katherine A.; Mandakovic, Valentina; Rallo, Monica; Rech, Jason A.; Cases, Barbara; Briones, Luis; Olguin, Laura; Valenzuela, Daniela; Borrero, Luis A.; Ugalde, Paula C.; Roihhanuner, Francisco; Latorre, Claudio; Szpak, Paul
    The social groups that initially inhabited the hyper arid core of the Atacama Desert of northern Chile during the late Pleistocene integrated a wide range of local, regional and supra regional goods and ideas for their social reproduction as suggested by the archaeological evidence contained in several open camps in Pampa del Tamarugal (PdT). Local resources for maintaining their every-day life, included stone raw material, wood, plant and animal fibers, game, and fresh water acquired within a radius of similar to 30 km (ca. 1-2 days journey). At a regional scale, some goods were introduced from the Pacific coast (60-80 km to the west, ca. 3-4 days journey), including elongated rounded cobbles used as hammer stones in lithic production, and shells, especially from non-edible species of mollusks. From the Andes (ranging 80-150 km to the east, ca. 5-8 days of journey), they obtained camelid fiber, obsidian and a high-quality chalcedony, in addition to sharing knowledge on projectile point designs (Patapatane and Tuina type forms). Pieces of wood of a tropical forest tree species (Ceiba spp.) from the east Andean lowlands (600 km away, ca. 30 days of journey) were also brought to the PdT. While local goods were procured by the circulation of people within the PdT, the small number of foreign items would have been acquired through some sort of exchange networks that integrated dispersed local communities throughout several ecosystems. These networks may have been a key factor behind the success exhibited by these early huntergatherers in the hyper arid ecosystems of the Atacama Desert at the end of the Pleistocene.
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    Geographical Variation of Shell Thickness in the Mussel Perumytilus purpuratus Along the Southeast Pacific Coast
    (2014) Briones, Carolina; Rivadeneira, Marcelo M.; Fernandez, Miriam; Guinez, Ricardo
    At broad geographical scales, the variation in bivalve shell thickness can be modulated by environmental factors that vary with latitude, such as sea surface temperature (SST), seawater pH, or calcium carbonate availability. Mussels usually form multilayered beds, and shell thickness is also expected to be affected by density and layering due to intraspecific competition. In this work, we explored the geographical variation of shell thickness in the intertidal mussel Perumytilus purpuratus between 18 degrees and 42 degrees S along the southeastern Pacific coast. We tested the hypothesis that there was a positive relationship between shell thickness and SST, and then we explored other variables that could have an effect on thickness, such as density, number of layers, and others environmental variables (pH and calcite concentration). The expected positive linear relationship between shell thickness and sea surface temperature was not found, but when the other population variables were included in the analysis, an unexpected inverse SST-thickness relationships appeared as significant, probably because this species could be adapted to colder and more acid seawater as are those of the tips of South America. Thickness was also negatively affected by density, which was expected for a gregarious species showing high intraspecific competition. Finally, our results highlight the importance of including density and crowding effects when macroscale patterns are explored, particularly in gregarious species, since these patterns could also be modulated by density-dependent processes, which might then override latitudinal trends of shell thickness when they are not included in the analyses.
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    Reef Fish Diversity Across the Temperate South Pacific Ocean
    (2022) Perez-Matus, Alejandro; Neubauer, Philipp; Shima, Jeffrey S.; Rivadeneira, Marcelo M.
    Patterns of species richness and their structuring forces at multiple scales provide a critical context for research efforts focusing on ecology, evolution, and conservation. Diversity gradients have been demonstrated in tropical reef fish, but corresponding patterns and mechanisms remain poorly understood in temperate regions. We conducted hierarchical (spatially nested) sampling of temperate reef fish faunas across > 140 degrees of longitude in the eastern and western South Pacific Ocean. Our sampling efforts spanned five distinct provinces: the Southeast Australian Shelf (SAS), Northern and Southern New Zealand (N-SNZ), Juan Fernandez and Desventuradas Islands (JFD), and the Warm Temperate Southeastern Pacific (WTPA). We evaluated (i) spatial variation in patterns of species richness and abundance (using Chao 1 index), and distribution of functional diversity (using several functional attributes: max body size, trophic groups, feeding guilds, trophic level, habitat use, gregariousness, and activity patterns) and (ii) scale-dependencies in these patterns. Species richness declined from west to east across the temperate South Pacific, but this pattern was detectable only across larger spatial scales. A functional redundancy index was significantly higher in the western South Australian Shelf at multiple scales, revealing that species contribute in equivalent ways to an ecosystem function such that one species may substitute for another. We also detected that patterns of variation in functional diversity differed from patterns of variation in species richness, and were also dependent on the spatial scale of analysis. Lastly, we identified that species' traits are not equally distributed among reef fish assemblages, where some provinces are characterized by a distinct functional component within their reef fish assemblages. Planktivorous and schooling species, for instance, dominated the assemblages in the eastern Pacific, which is characterized by higher primary productivity and steep bathymetric slopes favoring these traits. Demersal and pairing behavior traits dominated the reef fish assemblages in western Pacific provinces (SAS, SNZ). We conclude that combining the identifies and species' traits allow us to disentangle historical, biogeographic and environmental factors that structure reef fish fauna.
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    RISE AND DECLINE OF CHINCHORRO SACRED LANDSCAPES ALONG THE HYPERARID COAST OF THE ATACAMA DESERT
    (2012) Santoro, Calogero M.; Rivadeneira, Marcelo M.; Latorre, Claudio; Rothhammer, Francisco; Standen, Vivien G.
    The study of complex funerary ritual development among hunters and gatherers societies should take into account how people made up for the continuity of their social system without the support of centralized organizations. This research integrates cultural and natural factors to explore how the Chinchorro carried on with their way of life isolated at geographically restricted perennial river mouths with fresh water along the Atacama Desert in the Pacific coast of South America. Within these rather crowded settlings, they created and maintained a social system catalyzed by a complex funerary tradition, embodied by a unique funerary ideological discourse that resulted in the creation of a sacred landscape or "spiritscape". We argue that the extreme hyperaridity of the coastal Atacama Desert (21 degrees-17.30 degrees S), and the extraordinary biomass production of the marine littoral constituted a fundamental milieu for the maintenance of their long-term social system. The Chinchorro belief system lasted for several millennia (8,000-4,000 BP), but new ways of life and burial practices followed major changes in the coastal ecosystem they relied on, which would have influenced how the "old tradition" was manifested over time. Conversely, we sustain that these natural "constraints" faced by the Chinchorro along the coast of the Atacama Desert, were influential, in the course of their history or the way they socially organized themselves.
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    The fossil distribution of two pelagic lamniform sharks Alopias vulpinus and Lamna nasus, from South America
    (2023) Villafana, Jaime A.; Chavez-Hoffmeister, Martin F.; Cumplido, Nicolas; Campos-Medina, Jorge; Oyanadel-Urbina, Pablo; Rivadeneira, Marcelo M.
    The fossil record of the southeastern Pacific Ocean has been scarcely studied compared to other regions. We present the detailed description of two pelagic shark species, Alopias vulpinus (common thresher) and Lamna nasus (porbeagle) (Elasmobranchii: Lamniformes), from the Neogene of South America. The fossil teeth described here were recovered from the Bahia Inglesa Formation in Caldera, northern Chile. Our study provides the first comprehensive descriptions of fossil remains of A. vulpinus from Chile and L. nasus from the Americas. The occurrence of the common thresher shark represents the first published record and description of a representative from the family Alopiidae in northern Chile, whereas the fossil remains of the porbeagle shark are recorded for the first time in Chile. This study contributes to the understanding of the past distribution of shark species in the Eastern Pacific of South America during the Neogene period. It further confirms the particular abundance of lamniform sharks in the Neogene of Chile.

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