Llamas Aid in Land Revitalization at the Base of a Melting Glacier in Peru

Llamas Aid in Land Revitalization at the Base of a Melting Glacier in Peru




When glaciers ‌melt, they leave behind barren landscapes that can ⁢take ⁣decades to ‌support plants and ‌animals. But​ a new study found‍ that within just three years, such exposed⁤ land ⁢was revitalized ‍by llamas, whose activity nourished the soil and fostered plant growth.
By the end of that time, the ⁤otherwise arid and easily⁢ eroded soil stabilized, grew richer in nutrients and supported 57 percent more plant cover‍ than before, geographer Anaїs Zimmer and‍ colleagues report September 24 ‍in​ Scientific Reports.
Such a revival of the ancestral‌ Andean practice⁤ of camelid herding could potentially cushion the crops, animals and livelihoods of local⁣ communities from the impacts of ‍climate⁣ change, says Zimmer,⁢ of the University ‌of Texas at Austin.
As is​ the case worldwide, glaciers are disappearing in ⁢Peru’s Cordillera Blanca ​mountains at an unprecedented rate. And ⁢as‍ the ice ‍shrinks, nearby ecosystems wither: They ​lose access to summertime supplies of freshwater and sometimes encounter⁢ harmful acidic⁤ minerals ​in rocks ⁤once covered⁢ by the glaciers.

2023-10-27 08:00:00
Original from www.sciencenews.org

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