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Identification and conservation assessment of suitable habitats for Tibetan antelope in the alpine desert, QinghaiTibet Plateau.

ZHUGE Hai-jin1, LI Xiao-wen1, ZHANG Xiang2, GAO Feng2, XU Dong-hua2   

  1. (1State Key Laboratory of Water Environment Simulation, School of Environment, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China; 2Bayingolin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture Aerjin Mountain National Nature Reserve Management Headquarters, Korla 841000, Xinjiang, China)
  • Online:2014-12-18 Published:2014-12-18

Abstract: As a flagship and one of most endangered ungulates in the alpine desert of QinghaiTibet Plateau, the habitat conservation of Tibetan antelope (Pantholops hodgsonii) is vital to sustain its longterm population existence. In consideration of key habitat factors of the Tibetan antelope (i.e., food, topography and water source) as well as human interference factors like roads and settlements, the habitat suitability was modeled, and potential and valid suitable habitats were identified for Tibetan antelope in the alpine desert, QinghaiTibet Plateau. Furthermore, the conservation proportion index and conservation efficacy index were developed to facilitate the conservation assessment of three national reserves (i.e., Altun Mountain, Kekexili and Qiangtang) and their associated functional zones in the study area. The results showed that potential and valid area of suitable habitat across overall study area were 2.84×105 and 2.08×105 km2 respectively, with 16.1% of suitable habitat loss by human disturbance. At reserve level, the potential suitable habitats of Altun Mountain, Kekexili and Qiangtang were 2.01×104, 3.13×104 and 1.26×105 km2, which however decreased by 12.9%, 10.2% and 21.1% human disturbance respectively, indicating a prominent habitat fragmentation especially in Qiangtang National Nature Reserve (NNR). Although three NNRs had captured nearly 2/3 of the potential/valid suitable habitats with favorable conservation efficacy, there were still obvious conservation gaps outside the existing reserve network. At the functional zone level, buffer and experimental zones also showed significant conservation proportion and efficacy besides the core zone. Our research highlighted the necessity to optimize the existing reserve system by filling the conservation gaps, restructuring the functional zones and safeguarding the potential refuge habitats for those endangered ungulates in face of climate change.