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Dive into the research topics where María Victoria Vaieretti is active.

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Featured researches published by María Victoria Vaieretti.


Plant and Soil | 2013

Effects of differential grazing on decomposition rate and nitrogen availability in a productive mountain grassland

María Victoria Vaieretti; Ana M. Cingolani; Natalia Pérez Harguindeguy; Marcelo Cabido

Background and aimsGrazing may influence nutrient cycling in several ways. In productive mountain grasslands of central Argentina cattle grazing maintain a mosaic of different vegetation patches: lawns, grazed intensively and dominated by high quality palatable plants, and open and closed tussock grasslands dominated by less palatable species. We investigated if differences in the resources deposited on soil (litter and faeces) were associated with litter decomposition rates and soil nitrogen (N) availability across these vegetation patches.MethodsWe compared the three vegetation patches in terms of litter and faeces quality and decomposability, annual litterfall and faeces deposition rate. We determined decomposition rates of litter and faces in situ and decomposability of the same substrates in a common garden using “litter bags”. We determined soil N availability (with resin bags) in the vegetation patches. Also, we performed a common plant substrates decomposition experiment to assess the effect of soil environment on decomposition process. This technique provides important insights about the soil environmental controls of decomposition (i.e. the sum of soil physicochemical and biological properties, and microclimate), excluding the substrate quality.ResultsThe litter quality and faeces deposition rate were higher in grazing lawns, but the total amounts of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) deposited on soil were higher in tussock grasslands, due to higher litterfall in these patches. The in situ decomposition rates of litter and faeces, and of the two common plant substrates were not clearly related to either grazing pressure, litterfall or litter quality (C, N, P, lignin, cellulose or hemicellulose content). In situ litter decomposition rate and soil ammonium availability were correlated with the decomposition rates of both common plant substrates. This may suggest that difference in local soil environment among patch types is a stronger driver of decomposition rate than quality or quantity of the resource that enter the soil.ConclusionsOur results show that, although high grazing pressure improves litter quality and increases faeces input, the reduction in biomass caused by herbivores greatly reduces C and N input for the litter decomposition pathway. We did not find an accelerated decomposition rate in grazing lawns as proposed by general models. Our results point to soil environment as a potential important control that could mask the effect of litter quality on field decomposition rates at local scale.


Applied Vegetation Science | 2013

Deforestation and precipitation patterns in the arid Chaco forests of central Argentina

Laura Emilia Hoyos; Ana M. Cingolani; Marcelo Zak; María Victoria Vaieretti; David Eladio Gorla; Marcelo Cabido


Plant and Soil | 2005

Decomposition Dynamics and Physico-chemical Leaf Quality of Abundant Species in a Montane Woodland in Central Argentina

María Victoria Vaieretti; N. Pérez Harguindeguy; Diego E. Gurvich; Ana M. Cingolani; Marcelo Cabido


Biological Conservation | 2010

Predicting alpha, beta and gamma plant diversity from physiognomic and physical indicators as a tool for ecosystem monitoring

Ana M. Cingolani; María Victoria Vaieretti; Diego E. Gurvich; Melisa A. Giorgis; Marcelo Cabido


Annals of Botany | 2007

Two Measurement Methods of Leaf Dry Matter Content Produce Similar Results in a Broad Range of Species

María Victoria Vaieretti; Sandra Díaz; Denis Vile; Eric Garnier


Austral Ecology | 2010

Does decomposition of standard materials differ among grassland patches maintained by livestock

María Victoria Vaieretti; Ana M. Cingolani; Natalia Pérez Harguindeguy; Diego E. Gurvich; Marcelo Cabido


Journal of Hydrology | 2015

Water provisioning services in a seasonally dry subtropical mountain: Identifying priority landscapes for conservation

Ana M. Cingolani; María Poca; Melisa A. Giorgis; María Victoria Vaieretti; Diego E. Gurvich; Juan I. Whitworth-Hulse; Daniel Renison


Ecología austral | 2014

Descomposición y calidad físico-química foliar de 24 especies dominantes de los pastizales de altura de las sierras de Córdoba, Argentina

María Poca; Natalia Pérez-Harguindeguy; María Victoria Vaieretti; Ana M. Cingolani


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2011

Effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal colonisation on shoot and root decomposition of different plant species and species mixtures

Carlos Urcelay; María Victoria Vaieretti; Marisela Pérez; Sandra Díaz


Acta Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology | 2015

Scaling-up from species to ecosystems: How close can we get to actual decomposition?

María Poca; María Victoria Vaieretti; Ana M. Cingolani; Natalia Pérez-Harguindeguy

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Dive into the María Victoria Vaieretti's collaboration.

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Ana M. Cingolani

National University of Cordoba

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Diego E. Gurvich

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Marcelo Cabido

National University of Cordoba

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María Poca

National University of Cordoba

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Melisa A. Giorgis

National University of Cordoba

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Sandra Díaz

National University of Cordoba

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Axel von Müller

National University of Cordoba

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Carlos Urcelay

National University of Cordoba

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