Effects of Animal Husbandry on Secondary Production and Trophic Efficiency at a Regional Scale
2014
Irisarri, J. Gonzalo N. | Oesterheld, Martín | Golluscio, Rodolfo A. | Paruelo, José M.
Agricultural systems are expected to have higher net secondary production (NSP) than natural systems as a result of higher trophic efficiency and lower interannual variability. These differences, however, have not been quantified across regional gradients. We compiled a dataset of herbivore biomass, consumption, NSP, annual precipitation, and aboveground net primary production (ANPP) for extensive livestock farms across a wide precipitation gradient in Argentina. We compared these data with worldwide published studies of natural systems. In a double-logarithmic scale, NSP of agricultural systems increased with ANPP from semiarid to subhumid systems and decreased from subhumid to humid systems, a response that contrasted with the linear positive increase of natural systems. Compared to natural systems dominated by homeotherms, Eₜᵣₒₚₕ(NSP:ANPP) in agricultural systems in semiarid areas was 8 times higher, due to a 2 times higher Ecₒₙₛᵤₘₚ(Consumption:ANPP) and a 4 times higher Eₚᵣₒd(NSP:Consumption). In subhumid areas, Eₜᵣₒₚₕwas 46 times higher, due to a 13.7 times higher Ecₒₙₛᵤₘₚand a 3.3 times higher Eₚᵣₒd. In humid areas, Eₜᵣₒₚₕwas 5 times higher, due to a 2.5 times higher Ecₒₙₛᵤₘₚand a 2 times higher Eₚᵣₒd. The interannual variation of herbivore biomass, a major determinant of NSP, was 60 % lower in agricultural than in natural systems dominated by homeotherms, and was decoupled from the variability of precipitation. Agricultural systems reach higher NSP by (1) diverting a major proportion of ANPP from the detritus to the grazing chain, (2) converting more efficiently consumption into NSP, and (3) stabilizing herbivore biomass across years.
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