Range-wide trends in tiger conservation landscapes, 2001 - 2020

Eric W. Sanderson, D. Miquelle, K. Fisher, A. Harihar, Chris Clark, Jesse Moy, Peter Potapov, Nathaniel Robinson, Lucinda Royte, Dustin Sampson, Jamie Sanderlin, C. Yackulic, Michael Belecky, U. Breitenmoser, C. Breitenmoser-Würsten, P. Chanchani, Stuart Chapman, Arpit Deomurari, Somphot Duangchantrasiri, Elisa Facchini, Thomas N.E. Gray, John M Goodrich, Luke Hunter, M. Linkie, Willy Marthy, Akchousanh Rasphone, Sugoto Roy, Detrit Sittibal, Tshering Tempa, Mayuree Umponjan, Karen Wood
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Abstract

Of all the ways human beings have modified the planet over the last 10,000 years, habitat loss is the most important for other species. To address this most critical threat to biodiversity, governments, non-governmental actors, and the public need to know, in near real-time, where and when habitat loss is occurring. Here we present an integrated habitat modelling system at the range-wide scale for the tiger (Panthera tigris) to measure and monitor changes in tiger habitat at range-wide, national, biome, and landscape scales, as often as the underlying inputs change. We find that after nearly 150 years of decline, effective potential habitat for the tiger seems to have stabilized at around 16% of its indigenous extent (1.817 million km2). As of the 1st of January 2020, there were 63 Tiger Conservation Landscapes in the world, covering 911,920 km2 shared across ten of the 30 modern countries which once harbored tiger populations. Over the last 20 years, the total area of Tiger Conservation Landscapes (TCLs) declined from 1.025 million km2 in 2001, a range-wide loss of 11%, with the greatest losses in Southeast Asia and southern China. Meanwhile, we documented expansions of modelled TCL area in India, Nepal, Bhutan, northern China, and southeastern Russia. We find significant potential for restoring tigers to existing habitats, identified here in 226 Restoration Landscapes. If these habitats had sufficient prey and were tigers able to find them, the occupied land base for tigers might increase by 50%. Our analytical system, incorporating Earth observations, in situ biological data, and a conservation-oriented modelling framework, provides the information the countries need to protect tigers and enhance habitat, including dynamic, spatially explicit maps and results, updated as often as the underlying data change. Our work builds on nearly 30 years of tiger conservation research and provides an accessible way for countries to measure progress and report outcomes. This work serves as a model for objective, range-wide, habitat monitoring as countries work to achieve the goals laid out in the Sustainable Development Goals, the 30×30 Agenda, and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
2001 - 2020 年老虎保护地的全域趋势
在过去的一万年里,人类改变地球的所有方式中,栖息地的丧失对其他物种来说是最重要的。为了应对这一对生物多样性最严重的威胁,政府、非政府行为体和公众需要近乎实时地了解栖息地丧失的地点和时间。在这里,我们提出了一个全范围老虎(Panthera tigris)的综合栖息地建模系统,以测量和监测老虎栖息地在全范围、国家、生物群系和景观尺度上的变化,以及潜在输入的变化。我们发现,经过近150年的减少,老虎的有效潜在栖息地似乎稳定在其本土面积(181.7万平方公里)的16%左右。截至2020年1月1日,世界上共有63个老虎保护景观,覆盖面积为911,920平方公里,分布在30个曾经拥有老虎种群的现代国家中的10个国家。在过去的20年里,老虎保护景观(TCLs)的总面积从2001年的102.5万平方公里减少了11%,其中东南亚和中国南部的损失最大。同时,我们记录了在印度、尼泊尔、不丹、中国北部和俄罗斯东南部模拟TCL区域的扩展。我们发现将老虎恢复到现有栖息地的巨大潜力,在226恢复景观中得到了确认。如果这些栖息地有足够的猎物,并且老虎能够找到它们,那么老虎占据的土地基地可能会增加50%。我们的分析系统结合了地球观测、实地生物数据和以保护为导向的建模框架,为各国提供了保护老虎和改善栖息地所需的信息,包括动态的、空间明确的地图和结果,并随着基础数据的变化而不断更新。我们的工作建立在近30年的老虎保护研究基础上,为各国衡量进展和报告成果提供了一种便捷的方式。在各国努力实现可持续发展目标、30×30议程和《昆明-蒙特利尔全球生物多样性框架》中规定的目标之际,这项工作可作为客观、广泛的栖息地监测模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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