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- Title
An Evaluation of Suitable Habitats for Amur Tigers (Panthera tigris altaica) in Northeastern China Based on the Random Forest Model.
- Authors
Gao, Chunyu; Hong, Yang; Sun, Shiquan; Zhang, Ning; Liu, Xinxin; Wang, Zheyu; Zhou, Shaochun; Zhang, Minghai
- Abstract
Simple Summary: Using the random forest model to predict the potential habitat of Amur tigers (Panthera tigris altaica) in Heilongjiang Province and Jilin Province of northeastern China was based on animal occurrence sites and various environmental variables. The results show that the suitable habitat for the Amur tiger was mainly distributed in the southern part of the Laoyeling Mountains (Hunchun–Wangqing–Dongning–Suiyang) at the border between Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces, the Sino-Russian areas of the border of Huilin–Raohe in the eastern part of the Wanda Mountains, and Yichun Forest Areas in the Lesser Khingan Mountains. The potential habitat of Amur tigers in the study areas was small and severely fragmented, with a lack of connectivity between patches. The results of this study suggested that habitat protection, restoration, and ecological corridor construction should be strengthened to increase population dispersal and exchange, providing technical support for the Amur tiger population conservation and habitat restoration in the future. Amur tigers are at the top of the food chain and play an important role in maintaining the health of forest ecosystems. Scientific and detailed assessment of the habitat quality of Amur tigers in China is the key to maintaining the forest ecosystem and also addressing the urgent need to protect and restore the wild population of Amur tigers in China. This study used the random forest method to predict the potential habitat of Amur tigers in Heilongjiang and Jilin provinces using animal occurrence sites and a variety of environmental variables. Random forests are a combination of tree predictors such that each tree depends on the values of a random vector sampled independently and with the same distribution for all trees in the forest. The generalization error for forests converges to a limit as the number of trees in the forest becomes large. The generalization error of a forest of tree classifiers depends on the strength of the individual trees in the forest and the correlation between them. The results showed that the AUC value of the test set was 0.955. The true skill statistic (TSS) value is 0.5924, indicating that the model had good prediction accuracy. Using the optimal threshold determined by the Youden index as the cutoff value, we found that the suitable habitat for Amur tigers in the field was approximately 107,600 km2, accounting for 16.3% of the total study areas. It was mainly distributed in the Sino-Russian border areas in the south of the Laoyeling Mountains at the junction of Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces, the Sino-Russian border areas of Hulin–Raohe in the eastern part of the Wanda Mountains, and the Lesser Khingan Mountain forest region. The habitat suitability of the Greater Khingan Mountain and the plain areas connecting Harbin and Changchun was relatively low. Prey potential richness was the most critical factor driving the distribution of Amur tigers. Compared with their prey, the potential habitats for Amur tigers in Heilongjiang and Jilin provinces were small in total areas, sporadically distributed, and had low continuity and a lack of connectivity between patches. This indicates that some factors may restrict the diffusion of the Amur tiger, whereas the diffusion of ungulates is less restricted. The Amur tigers in this area face a serious threat of habitat fragmentation, suggesting that habitat protection, restoration, and ecological corridor construction should be strengthened to increase population dispersal and exchange. We provide a reference for future population conservation, habitat restoration, construction of ecological migration corridors, and population exchange of Amur tigers.
- Subjects
JILIN Sheng (China); HEILONGJIANG Sheng (China); RANDOM forest algorithms; HABITATS; HABITAT conservation; POPULATION transfers; FRAGMENTED landscapes; CORRIDORS (Ecology); PREDATION
- Publication
Biology (2079-7737), 2023, Vol 12, Issue 11, p1444
- ISSN
2079-7737
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/biology12111444