About AABP

Ecosystems

Through Innovative Techniques AABP Discovers More Diverse and Vulnerable Wetland Ecosystems than Previously Thought

As part of a long-term project, the AABP team has estimated that there are at least 30,000 hectares of Mauritia flexuosa (Arecaceae) palm swamp wetlands in Madre Dios, Peru (Figure 1). Mauritia flexuosa is known as the Aguaje palm, and the habitats that it dominates are called aguajales. For about two years the Los Amigos Botany team has been investigating the Aguaje palm swamps of Madre de Dios, with focus on those that occur in and around the Los Amigos Conservation Area. We have collected many data related to the vegetation, ecology, phenology, and fruit production of the Aguaje palm and the aguajal swamp habitat, as well as the dominant Vanilla orchid species that is restricted to specific boggy grasslands within aguajales. We have also overlapped our vegetation studies with collection of abiotic data as well as investigations of the fauna of the aguajal ecosystems, especially to compile a list of birds that we have encountered. We use the Los Amigos Geographic Information System (Tobler & Janovec 2003 and beyond) for various aspects of mapping, remote sensing, and spatial analysis required for this project.


Figure 1. Mauritia flexuosa (Arecaceae) palm swamps and other wetlands in Madre de Dios, Peru.

The Aguaje palm is a dominant plant species in most inundated areas in the region and for that reason humans have come to refer to many of these wetlands as aguajales. However, we have learned through extensive field work that there are many types of wetlands, not just aguajales. Because of the generalization, we believe that some of the most vulnerable wetland ecosystems in the region have gone unrecognized during more than two decades of biodiversity research in the Madre de Dios River basin. The diversity of wetlands in the region has not been factored into the conservation equation. One of our driving goals is to produce a more detailed, informative classification of these wetlands. We believe the most productive, efficient, and feasible approach involves good field work and standard data collection mixed with new, innovative techniques of GIS-based mapping, remote sensing, and geospatial analysis.

The Aguajal Project was continued in conjunction with exploration activities completed through the Los Amigos Botany Project. The strategy continued wetland inventory and monitoring activities in and around the Los Amigos Conservation Area during the years of field work. We have established a permanent inventory and monitoring program in the large aguajal near the Los Amigos Biological Station and at numerous other wetlands in the Madre de Dios basin, from the base of the Andes Mountains to the border of Peru and Bolivia.

We will meet our goal by accomplishing the following general objectives during the next year: (1) Study the distribution and vegetation of aguajal wetlands and surrounding vegetation; (2) Compare plant diversity and and vegetation patterns of wetlands in the Madre de Dios basin, with correlation to abiotic parameters (light, soil, and water); (3) Monitor and assess the ecology and natural history of the Aguaje palm and Vanilla orchid, with secondary studies of reprodutive and flower biology; (4) Provide education and training in relation to the biology and conservation of aguajales in the Madre de Dios basin.

General Methodology

Our methodology was divided into the following categories, among others: (1) mapping and remote sensing techniques powered by the Los Amigos GIS and expansion to cover the SW Amazon; (2) Qualitative and quantitative inventory of plant diversity and vegetation patterns using opportunistic collection techniques, transects, and plots already employed by the Los Amigos Botany team; (3) Monitoring of phenology, fruit production, and natural regeneration of the Aguaje palm and Vanilla orchid along several kilometers of permanent transects and within plots nested along the transect system; (4) Collection of basic abiotic data related to light, soil, and water characteristics, to be correlated with distribution and variation of plant diversity and vegetation patterns, as well as observed phenological patterns related to fruit production and natural regeneration of the Aguaje palm and Vanilla orchid; and (5) Hands-on training in the field of a Peruvian thesis students and local Research Assistants.

Projected Products

Through this project we further developed the Los Amigos GIS and Atrium GIS Repository. We developed habitat and vegetation maps that connected aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems in the Madre de Dios River basin. Through the Los Amigos Botany Project, we are currently producing a checklist and guide to the plant species of aguajal swamps and other wetlands in the Madre de Dios Basin, with focus at this point on the Los Amigos Conservation Area and vicinity. We are also planning for several publications that will result from this project, two of which are already in manuscript development stages. These publications will relate to the following topics, among others: (1) Plant diversity and vegetation patterns; (2) Resource use and management of the aguajal ecosystem; (3) Use of aguajales by animals; (4) Reproductive and population biology of the Aguaje palm and Vanilla orchid; and (5) Economic botany of the aguajal ecosystem.

Through our preliminary research, we developed a collaboration with Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru (PUCP) and obtained a two year grant to intensively study the Vanilla orchids within the wetlands of Madre de Dios. We believe that our efforts and contributions, together with those of our colleagues and collaborators working in the region, can help us move closer to developing a reliable management plan for aguajales and other wetlands in the Madre de Dios Basin and the southwestern Amazon, in general.

Mission

Through field, herbarium, and computer work, we want to provide an overall synthesis of information that will promote understanding, use, management, and conservation of Aguaje swamps in Madre de Dios.
Atrium