4.5 Article

Elusive cats in our backyards: persistence of the North Chinese leopard (Panthera pardus japonensis) in a human-dominated landscape in central China

Journal

INTEGRATIVE ZOOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 67-83

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1749-4877.12482

Keywords

habitat use; North Chinese leopard; occupancy; population size; spatially explicit capture-recapture

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31670537, 31200410]
  2. National Scientific and Technical Foundation Project of China [2012FY112000]
  3. Cyrus Tang Foundation
  4. Doctoral Fund of Ministry of Education of China [2019M653714]

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The study suggests that the wild population of North Chinese leopards is increasing in the remaining forests of the Loess Plateau, with a higher density compared to other areas in China. Prey species partially influence the habitat use of leopards, while human disturbances, especially oil wells, have negative impacts. Joint efforts by the government and researchers are needed to improve human disturbances management and prey population density, as well as to invest more in North Chinese leopard research for long-term survival and protection.
The North Chinese leopard (Panthera pardus japonensis), the least-known big cat, disappeared in most historical range for decades, following the development of modern civilization. Unfortunately, we have scarce knowledge about the status of this big cat so far, apart from anecdotal reports. In this study, we investigated density, distribution, and habitat use of the leopard, the apex predator, in a complex forest landscape in the Loess Plateau. We used a camera-trapping network to obtain population estimates for leopards over 2 years through spatially explicit capture-recapture models. Our results, based on maximum likelihood and Bayesian/MCMC methods, reveal that the largest wild population of the leopard was found widely distributed in remnant forests in central Loess plateau. The population is increasing in our study area, and the density of leopards (1.70 (SE = 0.48) - 2.40 (SE = 0.67)/100 km(2)) is higher than other areas of China. According to the analysis of 2 seasonal occupancy models, prey species drive partially the leopard habitat use, predicting that the big cat thrives from the recovery of prey community. However, human disturbances, especially oil wells, seem to have negative impacts on the habitat use of leopards. Specifically, it is necessary to have joint efforts by the government and researchers to improve human disturbances management and prey species population density, as well as strengthen the investment in research on the North Chinese leopard, which could all further strengthen protection ability and ensure the long-term survival of this species.

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