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12 December 2011 Demography of the clonal palm Prestoea acuminata in the Colombian Andes: sustainable household extraction of palm hearts
Catherine Gamba-Trimiño, Rodrigo Bernal, Jens Bittner
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Abstract

Prestoea acuminata is a highland clonal palm traditionally used as a source of palm hearts by the Awá Indians of Colombia and Ecuador; its commercial use thrived in the 1980's. Extraction pressure on the resource is particularly strong during Holy Week, as campesinos use it as a substitute for meat. We studied P. acuminata demography at La Planada Reserve, southwestern Colombia, and elaborated a ramet-based matrix model to assess the impact of different palm heart harvest regimes. The 1.5 ha study area had 1182 genets, composed of 5389 ramets. Harvestable stems were 23-40 years old and accounted for 0.32% of the stable stage distribution (SSD). Ramet population asymptotic growth rate lgr; was 1.0485, and was more sensitive to changes in the survival of stemless ramets. Observed stage distribution (OSD) differed from predicted SSD, which suggests the population was exhibiting transient dynamics. As our census was conducted four years after a severe ENSO, we argue that the OSD could be reflecting this environmental disturbance. Thus, harvest simulations must be interpreted with caution. Although P. acuminata ramets are abundant at La Planada, the typical genet architecture, with many stemless ramets (≈20) and only 1-2 stems appropriate for palm heart extraction, accounts for a very low resource yield (127 palm hearts ha−1 in our survey). This, and its slow growth rate, make P. acuminata suitable only for household extraction. As harvest has a strong effect on sexual recruitment, we recommend a maximum annual extraction of 10% of harvestable ramets.

© 2011 Catherine Gamba-Trimiño, Rodrigo Bernal and Jens Bittner. This is an open access paper. We use the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ - The license permits any user to download, print out, extract, archive, and distribute the article, so long as appropriate credit is given to the authors and source of the work. The license ensures that the published article will be as widely available as possible and that the article can be included in any scientific archive. Open Access authors retain the copyrights of their papers. Open access is a property of individual works, not necessarily journals or publishers.
Catherine Gamba-Trimiño, Rodrigo Bernal, and Jens Bittner "Demography of the clonal palm Prestoea acuminata in the Colombian Andes: sustainable household extraction of palm hearts," Tropical Conservation Science 4(4), 386-404, (12 December 2011). https://doi.org/10.1177/194008291100400403
Received: 7 June 2011; Accepted: 4 October 2011; Published: 12 December 2011
KEYWORDS
Arecaceae
La Planada
Matrix Projection
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