Artigo Revisado por pares

An assessment of endangered species habitat at large scale: chiru distribution across the Tibetan region of Chang Tang

2016; Institute of Vertebrate Biology; Volume: 65; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.25225/fozo.v65.i1.a10.2016

ISSN

1573-1189

Autores

Feifei Feng, Zhisong Yang, Jacob R. Owens, Rong Hou, Zhihe Zhang, Dunwu Qi,

Tópico(s)

Species Distribution and Climate Change

Resumo

Habitat degradation is a major threat to the survival of chiru (Pantholops hodgsonii). Detailed knowledge for habitat conservation in this steppe-dwelling ungulate is needed if effective conservation and management strategies are to be developed. The distribution of potential habitat and the relative value of habitat to chiru on a regional scale remains unknown, hindering landscape conservation planning. Our aim was to identify and rank chiru habitat across the Chang Tang region of the Tibetan Plateau. We assessed overall habitat suitability using geographical data, field surveys, and information contained within previous studies. We identified 10194 km2 of optimal habitat (1.71 % of the region), 256816 km2 of suitable habitat (43.17 % of the region), and 213799 km2 of marginal habitat (35.94 % of the region). Our habitat model shows that suitable habitat is located primarily in the central (Nyingma county and Shuanghu county) and western (Geze county) regions of the study area. When we looked specifically at a chiru reserve (Chang Tang Nature Reserve) located within the study area, we found that over half of the reserve could be classified as suitable habitat. This highlights the regional importance of this reserve to chiru conservation. Our findings further indicate that the protection of suitable habitat and improvement of habitat linkages will be important features of any regional chiru conservation plan.

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