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Habitat evaluation of wild Amur tiger (Panthera tigris altaica) and conservation priority setting in north-eastern China
Authors:Luan Xiaofeng  Qu Yi  Li Diqiang  Liu Shirong  Wang Xiulei  Wu Bo  Zhu Chunquan
Affiliation:1. College of Nature Conservation, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, China;2. Research Institute of Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, China;3. China Office, World Wildlife Fund, Beijing 100006, China
Abstract:The Amur Tiger (Panthera tigris altaica) is one of the world’s most endangered species. Recently, habitat fragmentation, food scarcity and human hunting have drastically reduced the population size and distribution areas of Amur tigers in the wild, leaving them on the verge of extinction. Presently, they are only found in the north-eastern part of China. In this study, we developed a reference framework using methods and technologies of analytic hierarchy process (AHP), remote sensing (RS), geographic information system (GIS), GAP analysis and Natural Break (Jenks) classification to evaluate the habitat and to set the conservation priorities for Amur tigers in eastern areas of Heilongjiang and Jilin Provinces of northeast China. We proposed a Habitat Suitability Index (HSI) incorporating 7 factors covering natural conditions and human disturbance. Based on the HSI values, the suitability was classified into five levels from the most to not suitable. Finally, according to results of GAP analysis, we identified six conservation priorities and designed a conservation landscape incorporating four new nature reserves, enlarging two existing ones, and creating four linkages for Amur tigers in northeast China. The case study showed that the core habitats (the most suitable and highly suitable habitats) identified for Amur tigers covered 35,547 km2, accounting for approximately 26.71% of the total study area (1,33,093 km2). However, existing nature reserves protected only (7124 km2 or) 20.04% of the identified core habitats. Thus, enlargement of current reserves is necessary and urgent for the tiger’s conservation and restoration. Moreover, the establishment of wildlife corridors linking core habitats will provide an efficient reserve network for tiger conservation to maintain the evolutionary potential of Amur tigers facing environmental changes.
Keywords:Amur tiger   Conservation gap   Conservation landscape   Habitat suitability index (HSI)   Conservation priority, wildlife corridors, habitat connectivity
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