Neha Patil (Editor)

San Guillermo National Park

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Area
  
160 ha

Established
  
1998

Phone
  
+54 2647 49-3214

San Guillermo National Park

Location
  
Iglesia Department, San Juan Province, Argentina

Address
  
Intendencia Calle La Colonia s/n (5465), Rodeo, San Juan, Argentina

Hours
  
Closed now Monday8AM–1PMTuesday8AM–1PMWednesday8AM–1PMThursday8AM–1PMFriday(Day of Remembrance for Truth and Justice)8AM–1PMHours might differSaturday8AM–1PMSunday8AM–1PMSuggest an edit

Province
  
San Juan Province, Argentina

Similar
  
Sierra de las Quijadas, Lago Puelo National Park, Perito Moreno National, Quebrada del Condorito, Calilegua National Park

Introduction to the wildlife biology project in san guillermo national park uw science posse


San Guillermo National Park (Spanish: Parque Nacional San Guillermo) is a national park in Argentina, in the Iglesia Department of San Juan Province. It was established in 1999 and is part of the San Guillermo Biosphere Reserve. The highest point of the biosphere reserve is about 6,000 m (19,700 ft). It consists of grasslands, wetlands, and canyons. The animals there include vicuña, guanaco, culpeo fox, Andean mountain cat, cougar, and Andean condor.

Contents

Grazing study short vegetation video 4 san guillermo national park argentina uw science posse


The park

The San Guillermo National Park is located in the northern part of San Juan Province, Argentina near the town of Rodeo and was established on January 13, 1999. It has an area of 166,000 hectares in the High Andes, and includes puna grassland and mountain summits. It was originally set up as a provincial reserve in 1972 and became the San Guillermo Biosphere Reserve in 1980. Its main objective is to preserve the natural habitat of vicuñas, and at the same time protect the other plants and animals of this mountain area.

Ecology

The altitude of the biosphere reserve varies between 1,000 and 6,000 m (3,300 and 19,700 ft). It totals 981,000 hectares (2,420,000 acres) with a core area of 42,000 hectares (100,000 acres) and consists of arid mountain ranges with no permanent water courses. The soils are mostly coarse, but in some parts, mostly above 3,500 m (11,483 ft), better soils support steppe grassland. The flora consists of scattered dwarf shrubs, interspersed with coarse grasses and herbaceous plants, and much bare ground. The shrubs include Adesmia, Patrastrephia, Fabiana, Azorella and Ephedra. Grasses present include Stipa, Calamagrostis and Festuca and flowering plants include Astragalus, Tropaeolum, Phacelia and Glandularia.

The main reason for setting up the biosphere reserve was to protect vicuñas. Also present in the reserve are the guanaco, the culpeo fox, the Andean mountain cat, the cougar, the southern viscacha, the short-tailed chinchilla, the Darwin's rhea, various ducks and geese, and the Andean condor.

Research

A research project involves fitting cougars, the top predator in the park, with GPS radio collars and tracking their movements. Simultaneously vicuñas, one of their main prey animals, are being fitted with collars to monitor their behaviour. It has been found that in areas of the park with plenty of cover, such as canyons and wetlands, the vicuñas are much more alert to danger and consequently spend less time feeding than they do on open plains. This alters the composition of the plant species present with a resulting increase in invertebrates and in biodiversity. There are plans to fit some condors with collars to find out to what extent they benefit from an increase in the frequency of vicuña kills.

References

San Guillermo National Park Wikipedia