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The guanaco Lama guanicoe Muller, 1776 has a wide distribution along the Andes and Patagonia. We studied the feeding behaviour of a guanaco population that lives over 4100 m altitude in the Andes of north-central Chile. By contrasting the diet of guanacos during a dry year with that of a wet year and comparing it with the plant availabilities in the field, we tested the hypothesis that the guanaco is a generalist herbivore. We predicted that under such extreme habitat conditions guanacos should consume whatever plant species are available in the environment, especially in a dry year, when vegetation is scarcer. In addition, we compared its diet at three different age classes. We estimated the diet through the microhistological analysis of plant remains found in guanaco pellets collected during January of 1997 (ie after a dry year) and 1998 (ie after a wet year; 41 vs 495 mm, respectively). Then, we computed dietary preferences, food niche-breadth, and food-niche overlap between years and among age classes. Vegetation cover and plant species richness were higher during the wet than during the dry year. The most common plants in the environment were perennial graminoids and legumes. Contrary to our prediction, the guanaco preferred a few plant species, showing a relatively narrow diet breadth that changed little between years differing in plant abundances. The diet proportions differed among the three age classes, however. Our data indicate that at least in this high-elevation population, guanacos are selective and non-opportunistic herbivores. This specialized feeding behaviour is puzzling given the energetic demands of living in a harsh environment with low availabilities of resources. The hypothesis that this is due to the lower palatability of the plants not eaten, remains to be tested.
Through the analysis of habitat use in free-ranging, sympatric guanacos Lama guanicoe (Müller, 1776) and vicuñas Vicugna vicugna (Molina, 1782), we tested whether spatial segregation between the two species occurred in a high-altitude (4000-5000 m) Andean ecosystem, North-Eastern Argentina. Puma presence was recorded in only one of the two summers when data were recorded. Therefore, we also tested the effects of predation risk on camelid habitat use and overlap. The two camelids adopted a very similar space use strategy, but guanaco tended to be observed more frequently than vicuñas in the forage-rich patches in close proximity to water. The three different social units, characterising the organization of both wild camelids, had partially different habitat uses and the variations between them contributed to narrow the extent of spatial overlap between species. In response to increased predation risk, camelids decreased the use of the areas where most signs of hunting activity occurred. Predatory pressure had a levelling effect in habitat use variation, thus further reducing inter­-specific segregation.
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