1. Transboundary Cooperation in the Tumen River Basin Is the Key to Amur Leopard (Panthera pardus) Population Recovery in the Korean Peninsula.
- Author
-
Li, Hailong, Pandey, Puneet, Li, Ying, Wang, Tianming, Singh, Randeep, Peng, Yuxi, Lee, Hang, Lee, Woo-Shin, Zhu, Weihong, and Choi, Chang-Yong
- Subjects
WATERSHEDS ,TIGERS ,INTERGOVERNMENTAL cooperation ,PENINSULAS ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
Simple Summary: The Lower Tumen River basin habitat at the Sino-North Korean border is crucial for reestablishing Amur leopards in the Korean Peninsula, where they once thrived. However, except for the Jingxin–Dapanling (JD) and Mijiang (MJ) corridors, most areas have become impassable due to human activities and urbanization. In this study, we evaluated the effectiveness of the MJ corridor by analyzing the species abundance, forest structure, landscape features, and disturbance factors. Our findings indicate that leopard activity is predominantly concentrated in the northern part of the corridor, with little to no presence in the middle and southern regions near the North Korean border. Human disturbances, forest structure, and infrastructural obstacles seem to impede the movement of leopards. To ensure the resurgence of the leopard population in the Korean Peninsula, it is imperative to mitigate or eliminate the impacts of these hindrances. This entails reducing human disturbances, enhancing forest structure, and removing infrastructural barriers. Such efforts are vital to facilitate the revival of the Amur leopards in their former range in the Korean Peninsula. The interconnected forest regions along the lower Tumen River, at the Sino-North Korean border, provide critical habitats and corridors for the critically endangered Amur Leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis). In this region, there are two promising corridors for leopard movement between China and North Korea: the Jingxin–Dapanling (JD) and Mijiang (MJ) corridors. Past studies have confirmed the functionality of the JD corridor, but leopards' utilization of the MJ corridor has not yet been established or confirmed. In this study, we assessed the functionality of the MJ corridor. The study area was monitored using camera traps between May 2019 and July 2021. We also analyzed 33 environmental and vegetation factors affecting leopard survival and analyzed leopard movement. In the Mijiang area, the Amur leopard was mainly active in the region adjacent to the Northeast China Tiger and Leopard National Park and did not venture into area near the North Korean border. The complex forest structure allowed leopards to move into the Mijiang area. However, the high intensity of human disturbance and manufactured physical barriers restricted further southward movement. Therefore, human-induced disturbances such as grazing, mining, farming, logging, and infrastructure development must be halted and reversed to make the Mijiang region a functional corridor for the Amur leopard to reach the North Korean forest. This necessitates inter-governmental and international cooperation and is essential for the long-term survival of the Amur leopard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF