4.6 Article

Horizon Scan of Transboundary Concerns Impacting Snow Leopard Landscapes in Asia

Journal

LAND
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land11020248

Keywords

collaboration; habitat; innovative solutions; integrated landscape approach; socio-ecological system; trade corridor; tourism

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council, grant to Hameeda Sultan [201839180002]

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The high-altitude region of Asia is facing natural resource degradation and threats to the habitat of snow leopards. This study reviews existing knowledge, identifies gaps, and proposes sustainable mitigation options. Snow leopard landscapes are vulnerable due to habitat fragmentation, conflict, population growth, climate change, land use, and unsustainable tourism. Protecting the socio-ecological system in this region requires a multi-pronged approach.
The high-altitude region of Asia is prone to natural resource degradation caused by a variety of natural and anthropogenic factors that also threaten the habitat of critical top predator species, the snow leopard (Panthera uncia). The snow leopard's landscape encompasses parts of the twelve Asian countries and is dominated by pastoral societies within arid mountainous terrain. However, no investigation has assessed the vulnerability and pathways towards long-term sustainability on the global snow leopard landscape scale. Thus, the current study reviewed 123 peer-reviewed scientific publications on the existing knowledge, identified gaps, and proposed sustainable mitigation options for the longer term and on larger landscape levels in the range countries. The natural resource degradation in this region is caused by various social, economic, and ecological threats that negatively affect its biodiversity. The factors that make the snow leopard landscapes vulnerable include habitat fragmentation through border fencing, trade corridor infrastructure, non-uniform conservation policies, human-snow leopard conflict, the increasing human population, climatic change, land use and cover changes, and unsustainable tourism. Thus, conservation of the integrated Socio-Ecological System (SES) prevailing in this region requires a multi-pronged approach. This paper proposes solutions and identifies the pathways through which to implement these solutions. The prerequisite to implementing such solutions is the adoption of cross-border collaboration (regional cooperation), the creation of peace parks, readiness to integrate transnational and cross-sectoral conservation policies, a focus on improving livestock management practices, a preparedness to control human population growth, a readiness to mitigate climate change, initiating transboundary landscape-level habitat conservation, adopting environment-friendly trade corridors, and promoting sustainable tourism. Sustainable development in this region encompasses the political, social, economic, and ecological landscapes across the borders.

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