| Literature DB >> 27408548 |
Li Yang1, Mujiao Huang1, Rui Zhang1, Jiang Lv1, Yueheng Ren1, Zhe Jiang1, Wei Zhang1, Xiaofeng Luan1.
Abstract
The range of the Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis) has decreased dramatically over the last 100 years. This species is still under extreme risk of extinction and conservation efforts are rigorous. Understanding the long-term dynamics of the population decline would be helpful to offer insight into the mechanism behind the decline and endangerment and improve conservation perspectives and strategies. Historical data collection has been the challenge for reconstructing the historical distribution. In China, new gazetteers having systematic compilation and considerable local ecological data can be considered as an important complementary for reconstruction. Therefore, we have set up a data set (mainly based on the new gazetteers) in order to identify the historical range of the Amur Leopard from the 1950s to 2014. The result shows that the Amur leopard was historically widely distributed with large populations in Northeastern China, but it presented a sharp decline after the 1970s. The decline appeared from the plains to the mountains and northeast to southwest since the 1950s. Long-term historical data, mainly from new gazetteers, demonstrates that such resources are capable of tracking species change through time and offers an opportunity to reduce data shortage and enhance understanding in conservation.Entities:
Keywords: Amur Leopard; Far Eastern Leopard; Northeast China; Panthera pardus orientalis; historical distribution; new gazetteers
Year: 2016 PMID: 27408548 PMCID: PMC4926640 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.592.6912
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zookeys ISSN: 1313-2970 Impact factor: 1.546
Figure 1.Amur leopard distribution in different periods.