fbpx
Wikipedia

Amur leopard

The Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis) is a leopard subspecies native to the Primorye region of southeastern Russia and northern China. It is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List, as in 2007, only 19–26 wild leopards were estimated to survive in southeastern Russia and northeastern China.[1] It is considered one of the rarest cats on Earth.[3]

Amur leopard
A captive Amur leopard at the Colchester Zoo, England
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Feliformia
Family: Felidae
Subfamily: Pantherinae
Genus: Panthera
Species:
Subspecies:
P. p. orientalis
Trinomial name
Panthera pardus orientalis
(Schlegel, 1857)
Historic and present distribution of the subspecies (excluding northern China to the west of Manchuria)
Synonyms[2]

P. p. japonensis (Gray, 1862)

As of 2015, fewer than 60 individuals were estimated to survive in Russia and China.[4] Camera-trapping surveys conducted between 2014 and 2015 revealed 92 individuals in an 8,398 km2 (3,242 sq mi) large transboundary area along the Russian-Chinese border.[5] In 2019, it was reported that the population was about 90 leopards.[6] In 2021, it was reported the population was about 110 individuals.[7]

Results of genetic research indicate that the Amur leopard is genetically close to leopards in northern China and Korea, suggesting that the leopard population in this region became fragmented in the early 20th century.[8] The North Chinese leopard was formerly recognised as a distinct subspecies (P. p. japonensis), but was subsumed under the Amur leopard in 2017.[2]

Naming and etymology

The names 'Amurland leopard' and 'Amur leopard' were coined by Pocock in 1930, when he compared leopard specimens in the collection of the Natural History Museum, London. In particular, he referred to a leopard skin from the Amur Bay as 'Amur leopard'.[9] Since at least 1985, this name has been used for the leopard subspecies in eastern Siberia and for the captive population in zoos worldwide.[10][11]

The Amur leopard is also known as the "Siberian leopard",[12] "Far Eastern leopard",[13][14][15] and "Korean leopard".[16]

Taxonomic history

In 1857, Hermann Schlegel described a leopard skin from Korea under the scientific name Felis orientalis.[17] Since Schlegel's description, several naturalists and curators of natural history museums described zoological specimens of leopards from the Russian Far East and China:

In 2017, the Cat Classification Task Force of the Cat Specialist Group subsumed P. p. japonensis to P. p. orientalis. The remaining synonyms are not considered valid subspecies.[2]

Genetic research

Phylogenetic analysis of leopard samples from Primorsky Krai and North Korea revealed that they cannot be distinguished. It is considered very probable that the Amur leopard metapopulation became fragmented less than a century ago.[8] Phylogenetic analysis of an old leopard skin from South Korea revealed it to be an Amur leopard.[16]

The complete mitochondrial genome of a wild male leopard specimen from Shaanxi province in central China has been amplified and is 16,966 base pairs long.[25]

Characteristics

 
Close-up of a leopard at Ménagerie du Jardin des Plantes

The Amur leopard can easily be differentiated from other leopard subspecies by its thick, pale cream-colored fur, particularly in winter. Rosettes on the flanks are 5 cm × 5 cm (2.0 in × 2.0 in) and widely spaced, up to 2.5 cm (0.98 in), with thick, unbroken rings and darkened centers.[9] Its fur is fairly soft with long and dense hair. The length of hair on the back is 20–25 mm (0.79–0.98 in) in summer and up to 70 mm (2.8 in) in winter. The winter coat varies from fairly light yellow to dense yellowish-red with a golden tinge, or rusty-reddish-yellow. In summer, the fur is brighter, with more vivid coloration pattern. It is rather small in body size, with males larger than females. Males measure 107–136 cm (42–54 in) with a 82–90 cm (32–35 in) long tail, a shoulder height of 64–78 cm (25–31 in), and a weight of 32.2–48 kg (71–106 lb). Females weigh 25–42.5 kg (55–94 lb).[26]

The North Chinese leopard was first described on the basis of a single tanned skin which was fulvous above, and pale beneath, with large, roundish, oblong black spots on the back and limbs, and small black spots on the head. The spots on the back, shoulders and sides formed a ring around a central fulvous spot. The black spots on the nape were elongated, and large ones on the chest formed a necklace. The tail was spotted and had four black rings at the tip.[18]

Distribution and habitat

 
Amur leopard. Frame from a camera trap

In the Russian Far East, the Amur leopard currently inhabits an area of about 7,000 km2 (2,700 sq mi).[27] It is well adapted to the cold climate and heavy snowfall of the region.[8] The association of the leopard with mountainous areas (and snow-free south-facing rocky slopes in winter) has been recorded. It is usually confined to places where wild sika deer (Cervus nippon) live, or where deer husbandry is practised.[26] Leopards cross between Russia, China, and possibly North Korea across the Tumen River, despite a high and long wire fence marking the boundary.[28]

The first camera trap image of an Amur leopard in northeastern China was taken in 2010 in Hunchun National Nature Reserve, in the Changbai Mountains of Jilin and Heilongjiang Provinces.[29] This habitat consists of broadleaved and conifer forests at elevations of 600–1,200 m (2,000–3,900 ft), where the annual average temperature is about 1.5 °C (34.7 °F).[30] In this area, leopards were repeatedly photographed by camera traps set up between January 2013 and July 2014 covering up to 4,858 km2 (1,876 sq mi).[31][32][33]

Elsewhere in China, Amur leopard distribution is fragmented, with small populations occurring foremost in isolated reserves. In Shanxi Province, leopards were recorded in 16 protected areas and six nature reserves (including Foping National Nature Reserve) during camera trapping surveys between 2007 and 2014.[34]

Historical range

Leopard fossils from the Pleistocene have been excavated in Japan, but the fossils' subspecies have not been identified with certainty.[35]

Historic records from before 1930 indicate that the Amur leopard occurred throughout eastern Siberia, northeastern China (near Beijing and the mountains to its northwest, as well as Manchuria), and the Korean Peninsula.[19][36] In Russia, its range was dramatically reduced during the 1970s to about 20% of its former range. The northern boundary of its occurrence commenced on the coast of the Sea of Japan at 44°N and ran south at a distance of 15–30 km (9.3–18.6 mi) from the coast to 43°10'N. There its range turned steeply westward, north of the Suchan River basin, then north to encompass the source of the Ussuri River and two right bank tributaries in the upper reaches of the Ussuri, and westward toward the bank of Khanka Lake. In the 1950s, leopards were observed about 50 km (31 mi) north of Vladivostok and in Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve.[26]

Leopards were extirpated from the Korean Peninsula while under Japanese rule.[37] At least 624 leopards were killed during the Japanese occupation between 1910 and 1945. In South Korea, the last known leopard was captured in 1970.[16] The Amur leopard is considered locally extinct in South Korea, and most likely so in North Korea.[1]

In China, Amur leopards occurred in the Lesser Khingan, Changbai Mountains and Wanda Mountains until the 1970s. In the following decades, the range decreased to a few areas in Jilin and Heilongjiang Provinces.[38] Today, only small and isolated populations remain in China.[25]

Ecology and behavior

 
Skeleton at the Museum of Osteology

Like other leopard subspecies, Amur leopards are solitary, unless females have offspring.[26] Records from camera-traps indicate that they are more diurnal (active during the day) than nocturnal, as well as crepuscular (active during dawn and dusk) during both the summer and winter seasons. This activity pattern coincides with activity periods of prey species such as Siberian roe deer (Capreolus pygargus), Manchurian sika deer (Cervus nippon mantchuricus) and Ussuri wild boar (Sus scrofa ussuricus).[33]

Amur leopards are extremely conservative in their choice of territory. An individual's territory is usually located in a river basin which generally extends to the natural topographical borders of the area. The territory of two individuals overlaps sometimes, but only slightly. Depending on sex, age and family size, the size of an individual's territory varies from 5,000–30,000 ha (19–116 sq mi). Individuals use the same hunting trails, migration routes and even rest places over the course of many years.[39] Leopards are resident at places where wild animals are abundant, and follow herds of ungulates. In the Ussuri region, their main prey are Siberian roe deer, Manchurian sika deer, Manchurian wapiti (Cervus canadensis xanthopygus), Siberian musk deer (Moschus moschiferus), Amur elk (Alces alces cameloides) and Ussuri wild boar. They also catch hares (Lepus sp.), Asian badgers (Meles leucurus), fowl, and mice. In Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve, roe deer is their main prey year-round, but they also prey on young Asian black bear (Ursus thibetanus) cubs under two years old.[26] When density of ungulates is low, leopards have large home ranges of up to 100 km2 (39 sq mi).[40]

During a study of radio-collared Amur leopards in the early 1990s, a territorial dispute between two males at a deer farm was documented, suggesting that Amur leopards favour such farms for hunting.[41] Female leopards with cubs are often found in the proximity of deer farms. The large number of domesticated deer on the farms is a reliable food source in difficult times.[42]

Reproduction

 

Amur leopards become sexually mature at the age of 2–3 years. They are able to reproduce up to 10–15 years of age. Estrus lasts 12–18 days, and in exceptional cases up to 25 days. Gestation lasts 90–105 days, and usually between 92 and 95 days. A newborn cub weighs 500–700 g (18–25 oz). The young open their eyes on the 7th–10th day and begin to crawl on the 12th–15th day. By the second month they emerge from their dens and also begin to eat meat. Cubs are weaned when three months old, and then learn to hunt. Lactation continues for five or six months. Cubs reach independence at the approximate age of two to three years. They stay with their mother until they are around 18 months to two years old.[43] Juveniles sometimes stay with their mother until she comes into estrus again. Until the 1970s, cubs were seen in Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve and in northeastern China most often between the end of March and May. Litters comprised two to three cubs. In captivity some individuals have lived for 21 years.[26] In 2011, an adult Amur leopard female was radio-collared in the vicinity of the Land of the Leopard National Park in the Khasansky District of Primorskyi Krai. During three years of tracking, she used a home range of 161.7 km2 (62.4 sq mi) with a core area of 23.3 km2 (9.0 sq mi). During estrus, she moved in a core area of 52.9 km2 (20.4 sq mi). After giving birth in late June, she reduced her movements to an area of about 3 km2 (1.2 sq mi) for a month, in which she shifted her cubs three times. From autumn onwards, she gradually increased her home range. When the cubs were more than one year old, the family moved together in the initial home range of 161.7 km2 (62.4 sq mi).[43]

During a population census in 1997, four females found with young had only one cub each. Results of radio telemetry studies confirmed that young stay with their mother for two years. In Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve, the young of two different litters were observed with their mothers at the same time.[39]

Threats

The Amur leopard is threatened by poaching of both individuals and prey species, habitat loss and deforestation. Its natural habitat is threatened by forest fires and construction of new roads.[1] Due to the small number of reproducing Amur leopards in the wild, the gene pool has such low genetic diversity that the population is at risk from inbreeding depression.[14] In 2015, a wild Amur leopard was found with canine distemper virus in Primorskyi Krai. Due to the small population, all wild individuals could possibly be exposed to domestic or wild disease carriers and transmitters in the future.[44]

Amur leopards are sympatric with Siberian tigers (Panthera tigris tigris) in some areas; in the Changbai Mountains, leopards have been recorded at higher altitudes and further distances from settlements and roads than tigers.[33] Tigers can kill leopards if densities of large and medium-sized prey species are low. Competition between these predators supposedly decreases in summer, when small prey species are more available. In winter, conditions are less favorable for tigers, which most likely causes the trophic niche overlap with leopards to peak.[40]

Amur leopards are also sympatric with Ussuri brown bears (Ursus arctos lasiotus), but no interactions between the two species have been recorded.[45]

Poaching

Poaching of Amur leopards is the main threat to their survival. Despite evidence of Chinese traders illegally buying leopard skins from Russia, no skins were confiscated at borders to China until 2002 and 2003, where over seven skins or part of skins were confiscated (six in Russia and one in China) over a period of 14 months. Leopards are most often killed by local Russians from small villages in and around the leopard's habitat. These villagers hunt entirely illegally; they have no licenses for hunting or their guns, are not members of one of the local hunting leases, and hunt Amur leopards (a protected species under Russian law).[42] In 1999, skins of poached leopards were offered for $500–1,000 near a protected area in Russia.[46]

Forest degradation

Human-induced fires are another main threat to the survival of the Amur leopard. Setting fire to fields is a habit of rural farmers who start them for a particular purpose, such as improving fertility for livestock grazing, killing ticks and other insects, making scrap metals visible so that they can be easily collected, culling vegetation along train tracks, and stimulating fern growth. Young ferns are sold in shops, served in restaurants and also exported to China as a popular dish. Surveys using satellite images and GIS techniques revealed that on average, 19% of south-west Primorye burns annually, and a total of 46% burned at least once in six years. Due to a long and frequent fire history, much of the land in south-west Primorye has been converted from coniferous forests (suitable leopard habitat) to open "savannah" landscapes with grass, oak bushes and isolated trees that leopards seem to avoid (most likely due to low ungulate densities).[42]

In the 20th century, large deer farms were built over thousands of hectares of leopard habitat; the velvet of deer antlers was sold to Asian pharmacies.[41] However, the number of deer farms has decreased considerably since the late 1990s.[42]

Development projects

A number of plans for economic activities in south-west Primorye were developed that posed a serious threat to the Amur leopard's survival. A plan to build an oil pipeline from central Siberia through Primorye to the coast of the Sea of Japan was shelved; another plan for an open pit coal mine in the heart of the Amur leopard's range was not carried out following pressure from environmentalists and the Ministry of Natural Resources. The strategic location of south-west Primorye (being close to the main population centres of Primorsky Krai, the Sea of Japan and the borders with North Korea and China) makes it more attractive for economic activities, including transport, industries, tourism and development of infrastructure. The activity of logging itself is not a major threat; however, the use of road networks established for the transport of logs from forests increases anthropogenic pressures in unprotected leopard habitat.[42]

Inbreeding

An acute problem is potential inbreeding. The remaining population could disappear as a result of genetic degeneration, even without direct human influence. The levels of diversity are remarkably low, indicative of a history of inbreeding in the population for several generations, or a population bottleneck. Such levels of genetic reduction have been associated with severe reproductive and congenital abnormalities that impede the health, survival and reproduction of some (but not all) genetically diminished small populations. Cub survival has declined over time, from 1.9 cubs per one female in 1973 to 1.7 in 1984, and 1.0 in 1991. Besides a decline in natural replacement, there is a high probability of mortality for all age groups, as a result of certain diseases or direct human impact.[47]

Conservation

The Amur leopard is listed in CITES Appendix I. It is stated to need better protection from illegal trade in skins and bones.[1]

In 2001, a meeting was held in Vladivostok with the aim of devising and planning management recommendations and activities needed to ensure the recovery and continued survival of the wild Amur leopard population in range countries. Chinese participants announced the creation of a new protected area in Jilin Province, the Hunchun Nature Reserve.[48] Since 2014, Russian and Chinese biologists collaborate in transboundary monitoring of the Amur leopard population.[5]

The Amur Leopard and Tiger Alliance (ALTA) is an initiative of Russian and western conservation organisations to conserve the Amur leopard and tiger, and secure a future for both species in the Russian Far East and Northeast China. ALTA operates across Northeast Asia under the guiding principle that only cooperative, coordinated conservation actions from all interested parties can save these endangered subspecies/populations from extinction. ALTA works in close co-operation with local, regional, and federal government and non-government organisations to protect the region's biological wealth through conservation, sustainable development, and local community involvement. The Phoenix Fund and the Wildlife Conservation Society provide a local framework for implementing ALTA projects, working closely with many Russian and Chinese agencies. With regard to conservation of leopards, ALTA aims at retaining a leopard population of 35 adult females (100 total) in south-west Primorye and the Jilin-Heilongjiang border region; and creating a second population of 20 adult females (60 adults total) in the former range of the leopard. Conservation projects for the leopard include:[42]

  • four antipoaching teams with a total of 15 members in the leopard's range
  • a special task force of local police and anti-poaching teams led by the Khasan prosecutor
  • monitoring of the leopard population through snow track counts and camera trap counts
  • monitoring and analysis of the impact of fires on leopard habitat and the effectiveness of firefighting
  • habitat assessment with geographic information system (GIS) techniques: assessment of the role of habitat quality, land ownership, land use, protection status, settlements, deer farms, roads, and human settlements with use of monitoring data and satellite images
  • development of land-use plans that take in account future needs of leopards
  • support for protected areas in the leopard range
  • compensation of livestock kills by leopards and tigers
  • a comprehensive education program for school children and students in the leopard range
  • support for hunting leases, and an ungulate recovery program
  • media campaign to create awareness about the leopard's plight
  • support and technical assistance for the new Hunchun Nature Reserve in China that borders on the leopard range in Russia

An oil pipeline planned to be built through leopard habitat was rerouted, following a campaign by conservationists.[49]

Reintroduction into the wild

Since 1996, the idea of reintroducing leopards to the south of the Sikhote-Alin mountain range has been discussed by ALTA members.[15] During a workshop in 2001, the outlines and principles of a plan for the development of a second population of the Amur leopard in the Russian Far East was prepared. For reintroduction to be successful, the reasons for leopards disappearing from the southern Sikhote-Alin in the middle of the 20th century needed to be studied. It was recommended to assess reasons for localized extinctions, obtain support of local people, increase prey in areas proposed for reintroduction, ensure that conditions exist conducive for reintroduction in the selected area, and ensure survival of the existing population. There are two sources of leopards for reintroduction: leopards born and raised in zoos and leopards raised in a special reintroduction center passed through a rehabilitation program for life in the wild.[47]

For successful reintroduction, it is clear that the design of the breeding and release centre (and the leopard management within it) must focus strongly on overcoming the difficulties imposed by the captive origin of the cats. Two necessary behaviours should be acquired prior to release: the hunting and killing of live natural prey, and avoidance of humans and tigers.[50]

During a meeting with Vladimir Putin in March 2009, the Minister of Natural Resources of Russia reassured that the ministry is planning to reintroduce leopards into the area, as well as create suitable and safe habita; he also stated the government had already allocated all required funds for the project.[51]

Potential reintroduction sites (contiguous patches of preferred habitat) were identified in the southern Sikhote-Alin. Three coastal potential habitat patches could harbour a population of approximately 72 adult leopards (exceeding the 50 individual minimum needed for a self-sustaining population).[27]

In captivity

A captive breeding programme for the Amur leopard was established in 1961 from nine wild-born founders.[11] A molecular genetic survey revealed that at least two founders of the captive pedigree had genetic information that is not consistent with any Amur leopards born in the wild.[14] Both the American and European zoo populations include contribution of genes from a male founder that was a different leopard subspecies. It has been the strategy of the European Endangered Species Programme to minimize his contribution and maintain genetic diversity of the captive population.[50]

As of December 2011, 173 captive Amur leopards were held in zoos worldwide. Within the EESP, 54 male, 40 female and 7 unsexed individuals are kept. In American and Canadian zoos, another 31 males and 41 females are kept within the Population Management Program.[52]

In media

The Animal Planet documentary The Last Leopard (2008) is about the plight of Amur leopards in Russia. The television series "Wild Russia" showed a glimpse into the life of leopards. A female leopard and her cub were featured on Planet Earth episodes "Seasonal Forests".[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Jackson, P. & Nowell, K. (2008). "Panthera pardus ssp. orientalis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008: e.T15957A5333757. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Kitchener, A. C.; Breitenmoser-Würsten, C.; Eizirik, E.; Gentry, A.; Werdelin, L.; Wilting, A.; Yamaguchi, N.; Abramov, A. V.; Christiansen, P.; Driscoll, C.; Duckworth, J. W.; Johnson, W.; Luo, S.-J.; Meijaard, E.; O'Donoghue, P.; Sanderson, J.; Seymour, K.; Bruford, M.; Groves, C.; Hoffmann, M.; Nowell, K.; Timmons, Z.; Tobe, S. (2017). "A revised taxonomy of the Felidae: The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group" (PDF). Cat News (Special Issue 11): 73–75.
  3. ^ a b Attenborough, D. (2007). "Seasonal Forests". Planet Earth. 60 minutes in. BBC. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  4. ^ Qi, J.; Shi, Q.; Wang, G.; Li, Z.; Sun, Q.; Hua, Y. & Jiang, G. (2015). (PDF). Biological Conservation. 191 (191): 258–265. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2015.06.034. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 April 2017. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
  5. ^ a b Vitkalova, Anna V.; Feng, Limin; Rybin, Alexander N.; Gerber, Brian D.; Miquelle, Dale G.; Wang, Tianming; Yang, Haitao; Shevtsova, Elena I.; Aramilev, Vladimir V.; Ge, Jianping (2018). "Transboundary cooperation improves endangered species monitoring and conservation actions: A case study of the global population of Amur leopards". Conservation Letters. 11 (5): e12574. doi:10.1111/conl.12574.
  6. ^ Hartzell, L. (2019). "Land of the Big Cats: China and Russia collaborate in comeback". chinadialogue. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  7. ^ McLaughlin, D. (2021). "Russia's big cats claw back territory under Kremlin protection". The Irish Times. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  8. ^ a b c Uphyrkina, O.; O'Brien, S. J. (2003). "Applying molecular genetic tools to the conservation and action plan for the critically endangered Far Eastern leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis)". Comptes Rendus Biologies. 326 (Supplement 1): S93–97. doi:10.1016/s1631-0691(03)00044-1. PMID 14558456.
  9. ^ a b c Pocock, R. I. (1930). "The Panthers and Ounces of Asia. Part II". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 34 (2): 307–336.
  10. ^ Abbasi, A. & Braunitzer, G. (1985). "The primary structure of hemoglobin from Amur leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis)". Journal of Protein Chemistry. 4 (1): 57–67. doi:10.1007/BF01025493. S2CID 84091188.
  11. ^ a b Shoemaker, A. (1997). International Amur leopard studbook. Columbia, NK: Riverbanks Zoological Park.
  12. ^ Ognev, S. I. (1962). Mammals of the U.S.S.R. and Adjacent Countries. Vol. 2 : Carnivora. Washington D.C.: National Science Foundation. ISBN 9780836830262.
  13. ^ Pikunov, D. & Korkishko, V. (1992). The Far Eastern leopard. Moscow: Nauka.
  14. ^ a b c Uphyrkina, O.; Miquelle, D.; Quigley, H.; Driscoll, C.; O'Brien, S. J. (2002). "Conservation genetics of the Far Eastern leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis)". Journal of Heredity. 93 (5): 303–311. doi:10.1093/jhered/93.5.303. PMID 12547918.
  15. ^ a b Spitzen, V.V.; Miquelle, D.G.; Darman, Y.A.; Aramilev, V.V.; Hötte, M.; Bereznyuk, S.L.; Laptev, A.A.; Aramileva, T.S.; Myslenkov, A.A.; Kerley, L.L. & Salkina, G. (2012). A Program for Reintroduction of The Far Eastern Leopard into Southern Sixhote-Alin, Primorskii Krai, Russian Far East. Amur Leopard Reintroduction. The Amur Leopard and Tiger Alliance. pp. 88–106.
  16. ^ a b c Hyun, J. Y.; Cho, J. H.; Pandey, P.; Min, M. S.; Kim, K. S. & Lee, H. (2020). "Phylogenetic study of extirpated Korean leopard using mitochondrial DNA from an old skin specimen in South Korea". PeerJ. 8: e8900. doi:10.7717/peerj.8900. PMC 7227655. PMID 32435529.
  17. ^ Schlegel, H. (1857). "Felis orientalis". Handleiding Tot de Beoefening der Dierkunde, Ie Deel. Breda: Boekdrukkerij van Nys. p. 23.
  18. ^ a b Gray, J. E. (1862). "Description of some new species of Mammalia". Proceedings of the Royal Zoological Society of London. 30: 261–263, plate XXXIII. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1862.tb06524.x.
  19. ^ a b Gray, J. E. (1867). "Notes on the skulls of the cats (Felidae)". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London: 258–277.
  20. ^ Milne-Edwards, A. (1867). Observations sur quelques mammifières du nord de la Chine. Annales des Sciences Naturelles, Cincquieme Serie, Zoologie et Paleontologie, Comprenant L'Anatomie, la Physiologie, la Classification et l'Histoire Naturelle des Animaux 8: 374–376.
  21. ^ Bonhote, J.L. (1903). "On two new species of Cat from China". The Annals and Magazine of Natural History; Zoology, Botany, and Geology. Series 7. 11 (65): 474–476. doi:10.1080/00222930308678802.
  22. ^ Trouessart, E. L. (1904). Catalogus mammalium tam viventium quam fossilium. Quinquennale supplementum anno 1904. Berlin: R. Friedlander and Sohn.
  23. ^ Matschie, P. (1908). "Über chinesische Säugetiere, besonders aus den Sammlungen des Herrn Wilhelm Filchner". In Filchner, W. (ed.). Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Expedition Filchner nach China und Tibet 1903---05, 4. Mammalia. Berlin: Ernst Siegfried Mittler und Sohn. pp. 134–244.
  24. ^ Brass, E. (1911). Aus dem Reiche der Pelze. Berlin: Verlag der Neuen Pelzwaren-Zeitung.
  25. ^ a b Dou, H.; Feng, L.; Xiao, W. & Wang, T. (2014). "The complete mitochondrial genome of the North Chinese Leopard (Panthera pardus japonensis)". Mitochondrial DNA. 27 (2): 1–2. doi:10.3109/19401736.2014.936421. PMID 25028790. S2CID 40433782.
  26. ^ a b c d e f Heptner, V. G.; Sludskij, A. A. (1992) [1972]. "Bars (Leopard)". Mlekopitajuščie Sovetskogo Soiuza. Moskva: Vysšaia Škola [Mammals of the Soviet Union. Volume II, Part 2. Carnivora (Hyaenas and Cats)]. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution and the National Science Foundation. pp. 203–273. ISBN 9004088768.
  27. ^ a b Hebblewhite, M.; Miquelle, D. G.; Murzin, A. A.; Aramilev, V. V.; Pikunov, D. G. (2011). "Predicting potential habitat and population size for reintroduction of the Far Eastern leopards in the Russian Far East". Biological Conservation. 144 (10): 2403–2413. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2011.03.020.
  28. ^ Nam, Sangmin (2005). (PDF). China Environment Series. 7: 83–88. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 October 2015. Retrieved 6 May 2015.
  29. ^ Feng, L.; Wang, T.; Mou, P.; Kou, X. & Ge, J. (2011). "First image of an Amur leopard recorded in China". Cat News. 55: 9.
  30. ^ Qi, J.; Shi, Q.; Wang, G.; Li, Z.; Sun, Q.; Hua, Y. & Jiang, G. (2015). "Spatial distribution drivers of Amur leopard density in northeast China". Biological Conservation. 191: 258–265. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2015.06.034.
  31. ^ Xiao, Wenhong; Feng, Limin; Zhao, Xiaodan; Yang, Haitao; Dou, Hailong; Cheng, Yanchao; Mou, Pu; Wang, Tianming; Ge, Jianping (2014). "Distribution and abundance of Amur tiger, Amur leopard and their ungulate prey in Hunchun National Nature Reserve, Jilin". Biodiversity Science. 22 (6): 717–724. doi:10.3724/SP.J.1003.2014.14184. S2CID 87872290.
  32. ^ Wang, Tianming; Feng, Limin; Yang, Haitao; Han, Boyu; Zhao, Yiheng; Juan, Lin; Lü, Xinyue; Zou, Liang; Li, Tong; Xiao, Wenhong & Mou, Pu (2017). "A science-based approach to guide Amur leopard recovery in China". Biological Conservation. 210: 47–55. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2016.03.014.
  33. ^ a b c Yang, Haitao; Zhao, Xiaodan; Han, Boyu; Wang, Tianming; Mou, Pu; Ge, Jianping & Feng, Limin (2018). "Spatiotemporal patterns of Amur leopards in northeast China: Influence of tigers, prey, and humans". Mammalian Biology. 92: 120–128. doi:10.1016/j.mambio.2018.03.009. S2CID 90802525.
  34. ^ Laguardia, A.; Kamler, J. F.; Li, S.; Zhang, C.; Zhou, Z.; Shi, K. (2017). "The current distribution and status of leopards Panthera pardus in China". Oryx. 51 (1): 153–159. doi:10.1017/S0030605315000988.
  35. ^ Ohdachi, S.; Ishibashi, Y.; Iwasa, A. M.; Fukui, D.; Saitohet, T. (2015). The Wild Mammals of Japan. Shoukadoh. ISBN 978-4-87974-691-7.
  36. ^ Ellerman, J.R. & Morrison-Scott, T.C.S. (1966). "Panthera pardus Linnaeus, 1758". Checklist of Palaearctic and Indian mammals 1758 to 1946 (Second ed.). London: British Museum (Natural History). pp. 316–317.
  37. ^ Jo, Y.S. & Baccus, J.T. (2016). "Are large cats compatible with modern society on the Korean Peninsula?". Ecological Restoration. 34 (3): 173–183. doi:10.3368/er.34.3.173. S2CID 88992035.
  38. ^ Yang, L.; Huang, M.; Zhang, R.; Lv, J.; Ren, Y.; Jiang, Z.; Zhang, W. & Luan, X. (2016). "Reconstructing the historical distribution of the Amur Leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis) in Northeast China based on historical records". ZooKeys (592): 143–153. doi:10.3897/zookeys.592.6912. PMC 4926640. PMID 27408548.
  39. ^ a b Pikunov, D. G.; Aramilev, V. V.; Fomenko, V. V.; Miquelle, D. V.; Abramov, V. K.; Korkishko, V. G.; Nikolaev, I. G. (2000). "Endangered species: The decline of the Amur leopard in the Russian Far East" (PDF). Russian Conservation News. 24: 19–21.
  40. ^ a b Kostyria, A. V.; Skorodelov, A. S.; Miquelle, D. G.; Aramilev, V. V.; McCullough, D. (2003). Results of Camera Trap Survey of Leopard Population in Southwest Primorski Krai, Winter 2002–2003. Wildlife Conservation Society.
  41. ^ a b Quigley, H.; Hornocker, M. (1995). "On The Trail of Russia's Leopards". International Wildlife. 25 (3): 38–43.
  42. ^ a b c d e f Hoette, M. (2003). . Zoological Society of London, Tigris Foundation, Amur Leopard and Tiger Alliance (ALTA). Archived from the original on 17 July 2007. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  43. ^ a b Rozhnov, V. V.; Chistopolova, M. D.; Lukarevskii, V. S.; Hernandez-Blanco, J. A.; Naidenko, S. V. & Sorokin, P. A. (2015). "Home range structure and space use of a female Amur leopard, Panthera pardus orientalis (Carnivora, Felidae)". Biology Bulletin. 42 (9): 821–830. doi:10.1134/S1062359015090095. S2CID 18681573.
  44. ^ Sulikhan, N. S.; Gilbert, M.; Blidchenko, E. Y.; Naidenko, S. V.; Ivanchuk, G. V.; Gorpenchenko, T. Y.; Alshinetskiy, M. V.; Shevtsova, E. I.; Goodrich, J. M.; Lewis, J. C.; Goncharuk, M. S. (2018). "Canine Distemper Virus in a Wild Far Eastern Leopard (Panthera pardus orientalis)". Journal of Wildlife Diseases. 54 (1): 170–174. doi:10.7589/2017-03-065. PMID 29053427. S2CID 9877905.
  45. ^ "Wildlife".
  46. ^ World Wide Fund for Nature. (2014). Amur Leopard.
  47. ^ a b Wildlife Conservation Society (2001). Final Report on a Workshop for Conservation of the Far Eastern Leopard in the Wild. Submitted to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the IUCN Cat Specialist Group.
  48. ^ Miquelle, D. (2001). "Workshop on Recovery of the Far Eastern (Amur) Leopard, Vladivostok, Russia". Cat News. 34: 2–4.
  49. ^ Sergienko, V.I., Baklanov, P.Y. and Voronov, B.A. (2014). The Development of the Oil-Gas Cluster in Primorsky Krai: Perspectives, problems, restrictions. Erina report no. 119: 14–23.
  50. ^ a b Christie, S. (2009). "Breeding Far Eastern Leopards for Reintroduction: The Zoo Programme Perspective". In Hayward, M. W.; Somers, M. J. (eds.). Reintroduction of Top-Order Predators. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 388–410. doi:10.1002/9781444312034.ch18. ISBN 9781444312034.
  51. ^ Лента.Ру (2009). Минприроды возьмется за восстановление популяции леопардов в России (in Russian; English translation: Ministry of Environment will undertake the restoration of the population of leopards in Russia). Lenta.ru, 18 March 2009.
  52. ^ International Species Information System (2011). "ISIS Species Holdings: Panthera pardus orientalis, December 2011".

External links

  • IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group: Panthera pardus in Asia and short portrait P. pardus orientalis
  • ALTA Amur Leopard Conservation
  • Tallinn Zoo live cameras
  • ALTA: videos
  • WWF: Amur leopard species profile, conservation efforts and how you can help
  • WCS Russia: Far Eastern Leopard Ecology
  • BBC: The Secret Leopards
  • BBC: Nature's Miracle Babies. Episode 2
  • WWF-US: Amur Leopard
  • "Amur Leopard, World's Rarest Cat, Doubles in Population". World Wildlife Fund. 2015.

amur, leopard, panthera, pardus, orientalis, leopard, subspecies, native, primorye, region, southeastern, russia, northern, china, listed, critically, endangered, iucn, list, 2007, only, wild, leopards, were, estimated, survive, southeastern, russia, northeast. The Amur leopard Panthera pardus orientalis is a leopard subspecies native to the Primorye region of southeastern Russia and northern China It is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List as in 2007 only 19 26 wild leopards were estimated to survive in southeastern Russia and northeastern China 1 It is considered one of the rarest cats on Earth 3 Amur leopardA captive Amur leopard at the Colchester Zoo EnglandConservation statusCritically Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraSuborder FeliformiaFamily FelidaeSubfamily PantherinaeGenus PantheraSpecies P pardusSubspecies P p orientalisTrinomial namePanthera pardus orientalis Schlegel 1857 Historic and present distribution of the subspecies excluding northern China to the west of Manchuria Synonyms 2 P p japonensis Gray 1862 As of 2015 update fewer than 60 individuals were estimated to survive in Russia and China 4 Camera trapping surveys conducted between 2014 and 2015 revealed 92 individuals in an 8 398 km2 3 242 sq mi large transboundary area along the Russian Chinese border 5 In 2019 it was reported that the population was about 90 leopards 6 In 2021 it was reported the population was about 110 individuals 7 Results of genetic research indicate that the Amur leopard is genetically close to leopards in northern China and Korea suggesting that the leopard population in this region became fragmented in the early 20th century 8 The North Chinese leopard was formerly recognised as a distinct subspecies P p japonensis but was subsumed under the Amur leopard in 2017 2 Contents 1 Naming and etymology 2 Taxonomic history 2 1 Genetic research 3 Characteristics 4 Distribution and habitat 4 1 Historical range 5 Ecology and behavior 5 1 Reproduction 6 Threats 6 1 Poaching 6 2 Forest degradation 6 3 Development projects 6 4 Inbreeding 7 Conservation 7 1 Reintroduction into the wild 7 2 In captivity 8 In media 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksNaming and etymologyThe names Amurland leopard and Amur leopard were coined by Pocock in 1930 when he compared leopard specimens in the collection of the Natural History Museum London In particular he referred to a leopard skin from the Amur Bay as Amur leopard 9 Since at least 1985 this name has been used for the leopard subspecies in eastern Siberia and for the captive population in zoos worldwide 10 11 The Amur leopard is also known as the Siberian leopard 12 Far Eastern leopard 13 14 15 and Korean leopard 16 Taxonomic historyIn 1857 Hermann Schlegel described a leopard skin from Korea under the scientific name Felis orientalis 17 Since Schlegel s description several naturalists and curators of natural history museums described zoological specimens of leopards from the Russian Far East and China Leopardus japonensis described and proposed in 1862 by John Edward Gray was a tanned leopard skin received by the British Museum 18 Leopardus chinensis proposed by Gray in 1867 was a leopard skull from the mountains northwest of Peking 19 Felis fontanierii proposed by Alphonse Milne Edwards in 1867 was a leopard skin from the vicinity of Peking 20 Felis ingrami was a leopard skin from Kweichow in central China and Felis villosa a leopard skin from the Amur Bay both proposed by J Lewis Bonhote in 1903 21 Felis Leopardus grayi proposed in 1904 by Edouard Louis Trouessart was a leopard fossil 22 Panthera hanensis proposed in 1908 by Paul Matschie was a leopard skin from Shaanxi province 23 Felis pardus sinensis proposed in 1911 by a German fur trader was a leopard skin from southern China 24 Panthera pardus bedfordi proposed in 1930 by Reginald Innes Pocock was a leopard skin from Shaanxi 9 In 2017 the Cat Classification Task Force of the Cat Specialist Group subsumed P p japonensis to P p orientalis The remaining synonyms are not considered valid subspecies 2 Genetic research Phylogenetic analysis of leopard samples from Primorsky Krai and North Korea revealed that they cannot be distinguished It is considered very probable that the Amur leopard metapopulation became fragmented less than a century ago 8 Phylogenetic analysis of an old leopard skin from South Korea revealed it to be an Amur leopard 16 The complete mitochondrial genome of a wild male leopard specimen from Shaanxi province in central China has been amplified and is 16 966 base pairs long 25 Characteristics Close up of a leopard at Menagerie du Jardin des Plantes The Amur leopard can easily be differentiated from other leopard subspecies by its thick pale cream colored fur particularly in winter Rosettes on the flanks are 5 cm 5 cm 2 0 in 2 0 in and widely spaced up to 2 5 cm 0 98 in with thick unbroken rings and darkened centers 9 Its fur is fairly soft with long and dense hair The length of hair on the back is 20 25 mm 0 79 0 98 in in summer and up to 70 mm 2 8 in in winter The winter coat varies from fairly light yellow to dense yellowish red with a golden tinge or rusty reddish yellow In summer the fur is brighter with more vivid coloration pattern It is rather small in body size with males larger than females Males measure 107 136 cm 42 54 in with a 82 90 cm 32 35 in long tail a shoulder height of 64 78 cm 25 31 in and a weight of 32 2 48 kg 71 106 lb Females weigh 25 42 5 kg 55 94 lb 26 The North Chinese leopard was first described on the basis of a single tanned skin which was fulvous above and pale beneath with large roundish oblong black spots on the back and limbs and small black spots on the head The spots on the back shoulders and sides formed a ring around a central fulvous spot The black spots on the nape were elongated and large ones on the chest formed a necklace The tail was spotted and had four black rings at the tip 18 Distribution and habitat Amur leopard Frame from a camera trap In the Russian Far East the Amur leopard currently inhabits an area of about 7 000 km2 2 700 sq mi 27 It is well adapted to the cold climate and heavy snowfall of the region 8 The association of the leopard with mountainous areas and snow free south facing rocky slopes in winter has been recorded It is usually confined to places where wild sika deer Cervus nippon live or where deer husbandry is practised 26 Leopards cross between Russia China and possibly North Korea across the Tumen River despite a high and long wire fence marking the boundary 28 The first camera trap image of an Amur leopard in northeastern China was taken in 2010 in Hunchun National Nature Reserve in the Changbai Mountains of Jilin and Heilongjiang Provinces 29 This habitat consists of broadleaved and conifer forests at elevations of 600 1 200 m 2 000 3 900 ft where the annual average temperature is about 1 5 C 34 7 F 30 In this area leopards were repeatedly photographed by camera traps set up between January 2013 and July 2014 covering up to 4 858 km2 1 876 sq mi 31 32 33 Elsewhere in China Amur leopard distribution is fragmented with small populations occurring foremost in isolated reserves In Shanxi Province leopards were recorded in 16 protected areas and six nature reserves including Foping National Nature Reserve during camera trapping surveys between 2007 and 2014 34 Historical range Leopard fossils from the Pleistocene have been excavated in Japan but the fossils subspecies have not been identified with certainty 35 Historic records from before 1930 indicate that the Amur leopard occurred throughout eastern Siberia northeastern China near Beijing and the mountains to its northwest as well as Manchuria and the Korean Peninsula 19 36 In Russia its range was dramatically reduced during the 1970s to about 20 of its former range The northern boundary of its occurrence commenced on the coast of the Sea of Japan at 44 N and ran south at a distance of 15 30 km 9 3 18 6 mi from the coast to 43 10 N There its range turned steeply westward north of the Suchan River basin then north to encompass the source of the Ussuri River and two right bank tributaries in the upper reaches of the Ussuri and westward toward the bank of Khanka Lake In the 1950s leopards were observed about 50 km 31 mi north of Vladivostok and in Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve 26 Leopards were extirpated from the Korean Peninsula while under Japanese rule 37 At least 624 leopards were killed during the Japanese occupation between 1910 and 1945 In South Korea the last known leopard was captured in 1970 16 The Amur leopard is considered locally extinct in South Korea and most likely so in North Korea 1 In China Amur leopards occurred in the Lesser Khingan Changbai Mountains and Wanda Mountains until the 1970s In the following decades the range decreased to a few areas in Jilin and Heilongjiang Provinces 38 Today only small and isolated populations remain in China 25 Ecology and behavior Skeleton at the Museum of Osteology Like other leopard subspecies Amur leopards are solitary unless females have offspring 26 Records from camera traps indicate that they are more diurnal active during the day than nocturnal as well as crepuscular active during dawn and dusk during both the summer and winter seasons This activity pattern coincides with activity periods of prey species such as Siberian roe deer Capreolus pygargus Manchurian sika deer Cervus nippon mantchuricus and Ussuri wild boar Sus scrofa ussuricus 33 Amur leopards are extremely conservative in their choice of territory An individual s territory is usually located in a river basin which generally extends to the natural topographical borders of the area The territory of two individuals overlaps sometimes but only slightly Depending on sex age and family size the size of an individual s territory varies from 5 000 30 000 ha 19 116 sq mi Individuals use the same hunting trails migration routes and even rest places over the course of many years 39 Leopards are resident at places where wild animals are abundant and follow herds of ungulates In the Ussuri region their main prey are Siberian roe deer Manchurian sika deer Manchurian wapiti Cervus canadensis xanthopygus Siberian musk deer Moschus moschiferus Amur elk Alces alces cameloides and Ussuri wild boar They also catch hares Lepus sp Asian badgers Meles leucurus fowl and mice In Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve roe deer is their main prey year round but they also prey on young Asian black bear Ursus thibetanus cubs under two years old 26 When density of ungulates is low leopards have large home ranges of up to 100 km2 39 sq mi 40 During a study of radio collared Amur leopards in the early 1990s a territorial dispute between two males at a deer farm was documented suggesting that Amur leopards favour such farms for hunting 41 Female leopards with cubs are often found in the proximity of deer farms The large number of domesticated deer on the farms is a reliable food source in difficult times 42 Reproduction Cub in Cottbus Zoo Amur leopards become sexually mature at the age of 2 3 years They are able to reproduce up to 10 15 years of age Estrus lasts 12 18 days and in exceptional cases up to 25 days Gestation lasts 90 105 days and usually between 92 and 95 days A newborn cub weighs 500 700 g 18 25 oz The young open their eyes on the 7th 10th day and begin to crawl on the 12th 15th day By the second month they emerge from their dens and also begin to eat meat Cubs are weaned when three months old and then learn to hunt Lactation continues for five or six months Cubs reach independence at the approximate age of two to three years They stay with their mother until they are around 18 months to two years old 43 Juveniles sometimes stay with their mother until she comes into estrus again Until the 1970s cubs were seen in Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve and in northeastern China most often between the end of March and May Litters comprised two to three cubs In captivity some individuals have lived for 21 years 26 In 2011 an adult Amur leopard female was radio collared in the vicinity of the Land of the Leopard National Park in the Khasansky District of Primorskyi Krai During three years of tracking she used a home range of 161 7 km2 62 4 sq mi with a core area of 23 3 km2 9 0 sq mi During estrus she moved in a core area of 52 9 km2 20 4 sq mi After giving birth in late June she reduced her movements to an area of about 3 km2 1 2 sq mi for a month in which she shifted her cubs three times From autumn onwards she gradually increased her home range When the cubs were more than one year old the family moved together in the initial home range of 161 7 km2 62 4 sq mi 43 During a population census in 1997 four females found with young had only one cub each Results of radio telemetry studies confirmed that young stay with their mother for two years In Kedrovaya Pad Nature Reserve the young of two different litters were observed with their mothers at the same time 39 ThreatsThe Amur leopard is threatened by poaching of both individuals and prey species habitat loss and deforestation Its natural habitat is threatened by forest fires and construction of new roads 1 Due to the small number of reproducing Amur leopards in the wild the gene pool has such low genetic diversity that the population is at risk from inbreeding depression 14 In 2015 a wild Amur leopard was found with canine distemper virus in Primorskyi Krai Due to the small population all wild individuals could possibly be exposed to domestic or wild disease carriers and transmitters in the future 44 Amur leopards are sympatric with Siberian tigers Panthera tigris tigris in some areas in the Changbai Mountains leopards have been recorded at higher altitudes and further distances from settlements and roads than tigers 33 Tigers can kill leopards if densities of large and medium sized prey species are low Competition between these predators supposedly decreases in summer when small prey species are more available In winter conditions are less favorable for tigers which most likely causes the trophic niche overlap with leopards to peak 40 Amur leopards are also sympatric with Ussuri brown bears Ursus arctos lasiotus but no interactions between the two species have been recorded 45 Poaching Poaching of Amur leopards is the main threat to their survival Despite evidence of Chinese traders illegally buying leopard skins from Russia no skins were confiscated at borders to China until 2002 and 2003 where over seven skins or part of skins were confiscated six in Russia and one in China over a period of 14 months Leopards are most often killed by local Russians from small villages in and around the leopard s habitat These villagers hunt entirely illegally they have no licenses for hunting or their guns are not members of one of the local hunting leases and hunt Amur leopards a protected species under Russian law 42 In 1999 skins of poached leopards were offered for 500 1 000 near a protected area in Russia 46 Forest degradation Human induced fires are another main threat to the survival of the Amur leopard Setting fire to fields is a habit of rural farmers who start them for a particular purpose such as improving fertility for livestock grazing killing ticks and other insects making scrap metals visible so that they can be easily collected culling vegetation along train tracks and stimulating fern growth Young ferns are sold in shops served in restaurants and also exported to China as a popular dish Surveys using satellite images and GIS techniques revealed that on average 19 of south west Primorye burns annually and a total of 46 burned at least once in six years Due to a long and frequent fire history much of the land in south west Primorye has been converted from coniferous forests suitable leopard habitat to open savannah landscapes with grass oak bushes and isolated trees that leopards seem to avoid most likely due to low ungulate densities 42 In the 20th century large deer farms were built over thousands of hectares of leopard habitat the velvet of deer antlers was sold to Asian pharmacies 41 However the number of deer farms has decreased considerably since the late 1990s 42 Development projects A number of plans for economic activities in south west Primorye were developed that posed a serious threat to the Amur leopard s survival A plan to build an oil pipeline from central Siberia through Primorye to the coast of the Sea of Japan was shelved another plan for an open pit coal mine in the heart of the Amur leopard s range was not carried out following pressure from environmentalists and the Ministry of Natural Resources The strategic location of south west Primorye being close to the main population centres of Primorsky Krai the Sea of Japan and the borders with North Korea and China makes it more attractive for economic activities including transport industries tourism and development of infrastructure The activity of logging itself is not a major threat however the use of road networks established for the transport of logs from forests increases anthropogenic pressures in unprotected leopard habitat 42 Inbreeding An acute problem is potential inbreeding The remaining population could disappear as a result of genetic degeneration even without direct human influence The levels of diversity are remarkably low indicative of a history of inbreeding in the population for several generations or a population bottleneck Such levels of genetic reduction have been associated with severe reproductive and congenital abnormalities that impede the health survival and reproduction of some but not all genetically diminished small populations Cub survival has declined over time from 1 9 cubs per one female in 1973 to 1 7 in 1984 and 1 0 in 1991 Besides a decline in natural replacement there is a high probability of mortality for all age groups as a result of certain diseases or direct human impact 47 ConservationThe Amur leopard is listed in CITES Appendix I It is stated to need better protection from illegal trade in skins and bones 1 In 2001 a meeting was held in Vladivostok with the aim of devising and planning management recommendations and activities needed to ensure the recovery and continued survival of the wild Amur leopard population in range countries Chinese participants announced the creation of a new protected area in Jilin Province the Hunchun Nature Reserve 48 Since 2014 Russian and Chinese biologists collaborate in transboundary monitoring of the Amur leopard population 5 The Amur Leopard and Tiger Alliance ALTA is an initiative of Russian and western conservation organisations to conserve the Amur leopard and tiger and secure a future for both species in the Russian Far East and Northeast China ALTA operates across Northeast Asia under the guiding principle that only cooperative coordinated conservation actions from all interested parties can save these endangered subspecies populations from extinction ALTA works in close co operation with local regional and federal government and non government organisations to protect the region s biological wealth through conservation sustainable development and local community involvement The Phoenix Fund and the Wildlife Conservation Society provide a local framework for implementing ALTA projects working closely with many Russian and Chinese agencies With regard to conservation of leopards ALTA aims at retaining a leopard population of 35 adult females 100 total in south west Primorye and the Jilin Heilongjiang border region and creating a second population of 20 adult females 60 adults total in the former range of the leopard Conservation projects for the leopard include 42 four antipoaching teams with a total of 15 members in the leopard s range a special task force of local police and anti poaching teams led by the Khasan prosecutor monitoring of the leopard population through snow track counts and camera trap counts monitoring and analysis of the impact of fires on leopard habitat and the effectiveness of firefighting habitat assessment with geographic information system GIS techniques assessment of the role of habitat quality land ownership land use protection status settlements deer farms roads and human settlements with use of monitoring data and satellite images development of land use plans that take in account future needs of leopards support for protected areas in the leopard range compensation of livestock kills by leopards and tigers a comprehensive education program for school children and students in the leopard range support for hunting leases and an ungulate recovery program media campaign to create awareness about the leopard s plight support and technical assistance for the new Hunchun Nature Reserve in China that borders on the leopard range in RussiaAn oil pipeline planned to be built through leopard habitat was rerouted following a campaign by conservationists 49 Reintroduction into the wild Since 1996 the idea of reintroducing leopards to the south of the Sikhote Alin mountain range has been discussed by ALTA members 15 During a workshop in 2001 the outlines and principles of a plan for the development of a second population of the Amur leopard in the Russian Far East was prepared For reintroduction to be successful the reasons for leopards disappearing from the southern Sikhote Alin in the middle of the 20th century needed to be studied It was recommended to assess reasons for localized extinctions obtain support of local people increase prey in areas proposed for reintroduction ensure that conditions exist conducive for reintroduction in the selected area and ensure survival of the existing population There are two sources of leopards for reintroduction leopards born and raised in zoos and leopards raised in a special reintroduction center passed through a rehabilitation program for life in the wild 47 For successful reintroduction it is clear that the design of the breeding and release centre and the leopard management within it must focus strongly on overcoming the difficulties imposed by the captive origin of the cats Two necessary behaviours should be acquired prior to release the hunting and killing of live natural prey and avoidance of humans and tigers 50 During a meeting with Vladimir Putin in March 2009 the Minister of Natural Resources of Russia reassured that the ministry is planning to reintroduce leopards into the area as well as create suitable and safe habita he also stated the government had already allocated all required funds for the project 51 Potential reintroduction sites contiguous patches of preferred habitat were identified in the southern Sikhote Alin Three coastal potential habitat patches could harbour a population of approximately 72 adult leopards exceeding the 50 individual minimum needed for a self sustaining population 27 In captivity In Tierpark Hellabrunn At Audubon Zoo A captive breeding programme for the Amur leopard was established in 1961 from nine wild born founders 11 A molecular genetic survey revealed that at least two founders of the captive pedigree had genetic information that is not consistent with any Amur leopards born in the wild 14 Both the American and European zoo populations include contribution of genes from a male founder that was a different leopard subspecies It has been the strategy of the European Endangered Species Programme to minimize his contribution and maintain genetic diversity of the captive population 50 As of December 2011 update 173 captive Amur leopards were held in zoos worldwide Within the EESP 54 male 40 female and 7 unsexed individuals are kept In American and Canadian zoos another 31 males and 41 females are kept within the Population Management Program 52 In mediaThe Animal Planet documentary The Last Leopard 2008 is about the plight of Amur leopards in Russia The television series Wild Russia showed a glimpse into the life of leopards A female leopard and her cub were featured on Planet Earth episodes Seasonal Forests 3 See also Cats portalLeopard subspecies Chinese leopard Zanzibar leopardReferences a b c d e Jackson P amp Nowell K 2008 Panthera pardus ssp orientalis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2008 e T15957A5333757 Retrieved 20 January 2022 a b c Kitchener A C Breitenmoser Wursten C Eizirik E Gentry A Werdelin L Wilting A Yamaguchi N Abramov A V Christiansen P Driscoll C Duckworth J W Johnson W Luo S J Meijaard E O Donoghue P Sanderson J Seymour K Bruford M Groves C Hoffmann M Nowell K Timmons Z Tobe S 2017 A revised taxonomy of the Felidae The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group PDF Cat News Special Issue 11 73 75 a b Attenborough D 2007 Seasonal Forests Planet Earth 60 minutes in BBC Retrieved 7 March 2012 Qi J Shi Q Wang G Li Z Sun Q Hua Y amp Jiang G 2015 Spatial distribution drivers of Amur leopard density in northeast China PDF Biological Conservation 191 191 258 265 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2015 06 034 Archived from the original PDF on 22 April 2017 Retrieved 22 April 2017 a b Vitkalova Anna V Feng Limin Rybin Alexander N Gerber Brian D Miquelle Dale G Wang Tianming Yang Haitao Shevtsova Elena I Aramilev Vladimir V Ge Jianping 2018 Transboundary cooperation improves endangered species monitoring and conservation actions A case study of the global population of Amur leopards Conservation Letters 11 5 e12574 doi 10 1111 conl 12574 Hartzell L 2019 Land of the Big Cats China and Russia collaborate in comeback chinadialogue Retrieved 13 December 2019 McLaughlin D 2021 Russia s big cats claw back territory under Kremlin protection The Irish Times Retrieved 19 January 2022 a b c Uphyrkina O O Brien S J 2003 Applying molecular genetic tools to the conservation and action plan for the critically endangered Far Eastern leopard Panthera pardus orientalis Comptes Rendus Biologies 326 Supplement 1 S93 97 doi 10 1016 s1631 0691 03 00044 1 PMID 14558456 a b c Pocock R I 1930 The Panthers and Ounces of Asia Part II Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 34 2 307 336 Abbasi A amp Braunitzer G 1985 The primary structure of hemoglobin from Amur leopard Panthera pardus orientalis Journal of Protein Chemistry 4 1 57 67 doi 10 1007 BF01025493 S2CID 84091188 a b Shoemaker A 1997 International Amur leopard studbook Columbia NK Riverbanks Zoological Park Ognev S I 1962 Mammals of the U S S R and Adjacent Countries Vol 2 Carnivora Washington D C National Science Foundation ISBN 9780836830262 Pikunov D amp Korkishko V 1992 The Far Eastern leopard Moscow Nauka a b c Uphyrkina O Miquelle D Quigley H Driscoll C O Brien S J 2002 Conservation genetics of the Far Eastern leopard Panthera pardus orientalis Journal of Heredity 93 5 303 311 doi 10 1093 jhered 93 5 303 PMID 12547918 a b Spitzen V V Miquelle D G Darman Y A Aramilev V V Hotte M Bereznyuk S L Laptev A A Aramileva T S Myslenkov A A Kerley L L amp Salkina G 2012 A Program for Reintroduction of The Far Eastern Leopard into Southern Sixhote Alin Primorskii Krai Russian Far East Amur Leopard Reintroduction The Amur Leopard and Tiger Alliance pp 88 106 a b c Hyun J Y Cho J H Pandey P Min M S Kim K S amp Lee H 2020 Phylogenetic study of extirpated Korean leopard using mitochondrial DNA from an old skin specimen in South Korea PeerJ 8 e8900 doi 10 7717 peerj 8900 PMC 7227655 PMID 32435529 Schlegel H 1857 Felis orientalis Handleiding Tot de Beoefening der Dierkunde Ie Deel Breda Boekdrukkerij van Nys p 23 a b Gray J E 1862 Description of some new species of Mammalia Proceedings of the Royal Zoological Society of London 30 261 263 plate XXXIII doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1862 tb06524 x a b Gray J E 1867 Notes on the skulls of the cats Felidae Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 258 277 Milne Edwards A 1867 Observations sur quelques mammifieres du nord de la Chine Annales des Sciences Naturelles Cincquieme Serie Zoologie et Paleontologie Comprenant L Anatomie la Physiologie la Classification et l Histoire Naturelle des Animaux 8 374 376 Bonhote J L 1903 On two new species of Cat from China The Annals and Magazine of Natural History Zoology Botany and Geology Series 7 11 65 474 476 doi 10 1080 00222930308678802 Trouessart E L 1904 Catalogus mammalium tam viventium quam fossilium Quinquennale supplementum anno 1904 Berlin R Friedlander and Sohn Matschie P 1908 Uber chinesische Saugetiere besonders aus den Sammlungen des Herrn Wilhelm Filchner In Filchner W ed Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Expedition Filchner nach China und Tibet 1903 05 4 Mammalia Berlin Ernst Siegfried Mittler und Sohn pp 134 244 Brass E 1911 Aus dem Reiche der Pelze Berlin Verlag der Neuen Pelzwaren Zeitung a b Dou H Feng L Xiao W amp Wang T 2014 The complete mitochondrial genome of the North Chinese Leopard Panthera pardus japonensis Mitochondrial DNA 27 2 1 2 doi 10 3109 19401736 2014 936421 PMID 25028790 S2CID 40433782 a b c d e f Heptner V G Sludskij A A 1992 1972 Bars Leopard Mlekopitajuscie Sovetskogo Soiuza Moskva Vyssaia Skola Mammals of the Soviet Union Volume II Part 2 Carnivora Hyaenas and Cats Washington DC Smithsonian Institution and the National Science Foundation pp 203 273 ISBN 9004088768 a b Hebblewhite M Miquelle D G Murzin A A Aramilev V V Pikunov D G 2011 Predicting potential habitat and population size for reintroduction of the Far Eastern leopards in the Russian Far East Biological Conservation 144 10 2403 2413 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2011 03 020 Nam Sangmin 2005 Ecosystem Governance in a Cross border Area Building a Tuman River Transboundary Biosphere Reserve PDF China Environment Series 7 83 88 Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2015 Retrieved 6 May 2015 Feng L Wang T Mou P Kou X amp Ge J 2011 First image of an Amur leopard recorded in China Cat News 55 9 Qi J Shi Q Wang G Li Z Sun Q Hua Y amp Jiang G 2015 Spatial distribution drivers of Amur leopard density in northeast China Biological Conservation 191 258 265 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2015 06 034 Xiao Wenhong Feng Limin Zhao Xiaodan Yang Haitao Dou Hailong Cheng Yanchao Mou Pu Wang Tianming Ge Jianping 2014 Distribution and abundance of Amur tiger Amur leopard and their ungulate prey in Hunchun National Nature Reserve Jilin Biodiversity Science 22 6 717 724 doi 10 3724 SP J 1003 2014 14184 S2CID 87872290 Wang Tianming Feng Limin Yang Haitao Han Boyu Zhao Yiheng Juan Lin Lu Xinyue Zou Liang Li Tong Xiao Wenhong amp Mou Pu 2017 A science based approach to guide Amur leopard recovery in China Biological Conservation 210 47 55 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2016 03 014 a b c Yang Haitao Zhao Xiaodan Han Boyu Wang Tianming Mou Pu Ge Jianping amp Feng Limin 2018 Spatiotemporal patterns of Amur leopards in northeast China Influence of tigers prey and humans Mammalian Biology 92 120 128 doi 10 1016 j mambio 2018 03 009 S2CID 90802525 Laguardia A Kamler J F Li S Zhang C Zhou Z Shi K 2017 The current distribution and status of leopards Panthera pardus in China Oryx 51 1 153 159 doi 10 1017 S0030605315000988 Ohdachi S Ishibashi Y Iwasa A M Fukui D Saitohet T 2015 The Wild Mammals of Japan Shoukadoh ISBN 978 4 87974 691 7 Ellerman J R amp Morrison Scott T C S 1966 Panthera pardus Linnaeus 1758 Checklist of Palaearctic and Indian mammals 1758 to 1946 Second ed London British Museum Natural History pp 316 317 Jo Y S amp Baccus J T 2016 Are large cats compatible with modern society on the Korean Peninsula Ecological Restoration 34 3 173 183 doi 10 3368 er 34 3 173 S2CID 88992035 Yang L Huang M Zhang R Lv J Ren Y Jiang Z Zhang W amp Luan X 2016 Reconstructing the historical distribution of the Amur Leopard Panthera pardus orientalis in Northeast China based on historical records ZooKeys 592 143 153 doi 10 3897 zookeys 592 6912 PMC 4926640 PMID 27408548 a b Pikunov D G Aramilev V V Fomenko V V Miquelle D V Abramov V K Korkishko V G Nikolaev I G 2000 Endangered species The decline of the Amur leopard in the Russian Far East PDF Russian Conservation News 24 19 21 a b Kostyria A V Skorodelov A S Miquelle D G Aramilev V V McCullough D 2003 Results of Camera Trap Survey of Leopard Population in Southwest Primorski Krai Winter 2002 2003 Wildlife Conservation Society a b Quigley H Hornocker M 1995 On The Trail of Russia s Leopards International Wildlife 25 3 38 43 a b c d e f Hoette M 2003 Amur Leopard and Tiger Conservation in a social and economic context Zoological Society of London Tigris Foundation Amur Leopard and Tiger Alliance ALTA Archived from the original on 17 July 2007 Retrieved 4 January 2014 a b Rozhnov V V Chistopolova M D Lukarevskii V S Hernandez Blanco J A Naidenko S V amp Sorokin P A 2015 Home range structure and space use of a female Amur leopard Panthera pardus orientalis Carnivora Felidae Biology Bulletin 42 9 821 830 doi 10 1134 S1062359015090095 S2CID 18681573 Sulikhan N S Gilbert M Blidchenko E Y Naidenko S V Ivanchuk G V Gorpenchenko T Y Alshinetskiy M V Shevtsova E I Goodrich J M Lewis J C Goncharuk M S 2018 Canine Distemper Virus in a Wild Far Eastern Leopard Panthera pardus orientalis Journal of Wildlife Diseases 54 1 170 174 doi 10 7589 2017 03 065 PMID 29053427 S2CID 9877905 Wildlife World Wide Fund for Nature 2014 Amur Leopard a b Wildlife Conservation Society 2001 Final Report on a Workshop for Conservation of the Far Eastern Leopard in the Wild Submitted to the U S Fish and Wildlife Service and the IUCN Cat Specialist Group Miquelle D 2001 Workshop on Recovery of the Far Eastern Amur Leopard Vladivostok Russia Cat News 34 2 4 Sergienko V I Baklanov P Y and Voronov B A 2014 The Development of the Oil Gas Cluster in Primorsky Krai Perspectives problems restrictions Erina report no 119 14 23 a b Christie S 2009 Breeding Far Eastern Leopards for Reintroduction The Zoo Programme Perspective In Hayward M W Somers M J eds Reintroduction of Top Order Predators Oxford UK Wiley Blackwell pp 388 410 doi 10 1002 9781444312034 ch18 ISBN 9781444312034 Lenta Ru 2009 Minprirody vozmetsya za vosstanovlenie populyacii leopardov v Rossii in Russian English translation Ministry of Environment will undertake the restoration of the population of leopards in Russia Lenta ru 18 March 2009 International Species Information System 2011 ISIS Species Holdings Panthera pardus orientalis December 2011 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Panthera pardus orientalis Wikispecies has information related to Panthera pardus orientalis IUCN SSC Cat Specialist Group Panthera pardus in Asia and short portrait P pardus orientalis ALTA Amur Leopard Conservation The Tigris Foundation dedicated to the conservation of the Amur leopard Tallinn Zoo live cameras ALTA videos WWF Russia Far Eastern Amur leopard WWF Amur leopard species profile conservation efforts and how you can help AMUR Russia UK WCS Russia Far Eastern Leopard Ecology BBC The Secret Leopards BBC Nature s Miracle Babies Episode 2 WWF US Amur Leopard Amur Leopard World s Rarest Cat Doubles in Population World Wildlife Fund 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amur leopard amp oldid 1124894698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.