Peruvian project brings vicuna back from the brink
Eighty per cent of Peru's livestock is raised in the puna, or
arid tableland, which comprises 6.5 million hectares of natural mountain
pastures. But the zone's low temperatures mean that plants there grow only four
or five months of the year and a few hours a day, and that frosts are frequent.
Overgrazing, which these conditions aggravate, further destroys this already
fragile environment. The solution could lie in an indigenous wild animal, the
graceful vicuna.
The vicuna is an American cameloid, of small stature, like a
deer. It can run long distances at 47 km/h at altitudes of 4 500 metres above
sea level without tiring. Unlike sheep hooves, which cut the hard soil and
contribute to erosion, the foot of the vicuna is covered with soft pads, which
allow it to hold fast on the rocky surfaces and which prevent damage to the
soil. Moreover, while sheep or goats uproot the plants they eat, which causes
the land to crumble and turn to dust, which then blows away, the vicuna cuts
them with its lower incisors that grow continually and are covered with hard
enamel. Finally, its adaptation to the environment of the Andean altiplano is
such that the newborn vicuna can run soon after birth and weighs 15 per cent of
the mother's weight.
The Incas knew how to exploit wild resources. In the year 1500,
the vicuna population was estimated at 2 million head. The indigenous people
joined by the thousands to form a sort of human fence to corral the chaco - wild
vicunas and huanacos, which they caught and sheared or slaughtered. According to
the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, the brilliant mestizo historian of his lost
culture, they did not believe that the Sun God or Earth Goddess created wild
animals to be useless, and the vicuna and the other cameloids, the llama and
alpaca, were useful indeed.
It was its coat that brought the vicuna to the brink of
extinction, in spite of the king of Spain and his viceroys, Simon Bolivar, the
governments of independence, and, in this century, international treaties (the
vicuna is also found on the altiplanos of Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, and
Chile). The king of Spain signed a royal mandate in 1577, shortly after the
conquest, prohibiting hunting the vicuna; Bolivar, in 1825, repeated that
prohibition, and over the decades there have been more than 15 decrees and
conventions. Nevertheless, the vicuna continued to be hunted for its fleece. If
we calculate that in 1500 there were 2 million, in 1957, 250 000 head were
counted, and ten years later in 1967, there were only 10 000, which declined to
only 2 647 in 1969. In 1965, the creation of the Pampa Galera National vicuna
Reserve fortunately allowed the trend to reverse itself in Peru and in 1982 the
vicuna population had risen to 20 893.
Building on the above-mentioned reserve, a project has been
under way since 1980 - the Project for the Rational Utilization of the vicuna -
involving 963 peasant communities and 48 150 families. The basic idea is to make
better use of the Andean pastures by having vicunas graze together with domestic
animals, or allocating them for grazing of vicunas and other wild animals. The
vicunas would be captured every two years, in a chaco, to register them, mark
them, shear them, and set them free again. The aims of the project have been to
repopulate the puna with 3 million vicunas (on 15 million hectares), to develop
a technology adequate to the ecological and socio-economic situation of the
region, to increase profitability of marginal mountain lands by means of
vicuna-raising, to advise and financially support the peasant communities by
means of Government action, in the utilisation the vicuna on the lands, to
promote the domestic processing and the exportation of vicuna products, and,
once guaranteed the survival of the species is secure, to develop a model for
the utilization of national wildlife. The experience of the Pampa Galeras
Reserve proves that those objectives are possible, since, although the vicuna is
still threatened in the rest of the country, the Reserve is today facing the
problem of overpopulation, since the animals are reproducing.
Evidently, the main concern of the proponents of the project is
preservation of the species, which still has not been universally assured, more
than the industrialization of the resource. But they also work for the future,
studying the characteristics of fleece, hide and meat of the vicuna, with a view
to its possible exportation.
Peruvian sheep can yield up to eight kilos of meat and 4.5 of
wool per year, but in the puna the yield is only half the meat and half a kilo
of wool. The cameloids - the competition - comprise not only the vicuna, the
llama, and the alpaca but also the hybrids. The cross between a female alpaca
and a male llama is the huarizo, which has a heavier fleece, and that of female
alpaca and male vicuna, or vice versa, is the pacovicuna, with a very fine
fibre, superior to that of the alpaca. A vicuna in its useful life can be
sheared five times and its coat has a value 20 times that of the wool of a good
sheep and 10 times that of alpaca wool. Moreover, there are the hide and the
meat.
The meat, like that of all wild herbivores, is excellent. The
vicuna is a great runner and its muscles are red and succulent. Insofar as its
population is increasing, the vicuna can be a high-quality food for the local
inhabitants or offered to foreign palates in search of exotic foods to make them
forget the usual animals stuffed with hormones and artificial fodders. As for
the hide, it is very small Just one square metre) and covered with scars, as is
normal for wild animals, and it is too thin for shoes, gloves, or coats.
But it has great resistance to tearing and a very smooth grain;
tanned with chrome or with vegetal processes, dyed, and finished, it could be
used to manufacture purses or high-quality morocco products.
But the essential advantage of the vicuna lies in its wool. Its
fleece is composed of a mixture of fine fibres, lower down, and thicker and
coarser in the upper coat, vicuna wool is composed exclusively of the fine
fibres of the lower layer of the fleece, which, with a thickness of 12.1
microns, are like those of the angora rabbit (that of the cashmere goat has a
diameter of 15-16 microns and of the merino sheep 17-18). This permits weaving
garments of vicuna that are far softer and more workable than those made with
other famous fibres.
Moreover, the yield, or the percentage of washed fibre to the
original weight before treatment, is 87 per cent, and far surpasses that of the
sheep and the alpaca. The buyer pays for fleece and not impurities, but also
intensive treatment with alkaline chemical substances, which damage the fibres
during processing, can be avoided.
The project hopes to achieve a density of one vicuna per five
hectares and a rate of growth of 20 per cent, similar to that obtained on the
Pampa Galeras Reserve. It would mean - if means of control and conservation are
applied - obtaining some 3 million head by the year 2000. Already some $30
million annually could be earned from the vicuna, and the project would be
self-sufficient, since the processing of 375 000 vicunas a year could give 7.5
million kg of meat, at $1.00 each, 375 000 hides, at $30 each, and 75 000 kg of
fibre, at the current price. Investment in the project, for its part, was
calculated to establish goals (in 1977) of $4.4 million, half of which from
abroad.
Guillermo
Almeyra