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Author Hameed, S., Din, J. U., Ali, H., Kabir, M., Younas, M., Rehman, E. U., Bari, F., Hao, W., Bischof, R., Nawaz, M. A. url 
  Title Identifying priority landscapes for conservation of snow leopards in Pakistan Type Journal Article
  Year 2020 Publication Plos One Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume Issue Pages 1-20  
  Keywords (down)  
  Abstract Pakistan’s total estimated snow leopard habitat is about

80,000 km2 of which about half is considered prime habitat. However,

this preliminary demarcation was not always in close agreement with the

actual distribution the discrepancy may be huge at the local and

regional level. Recent technological developments like camera trapping

and molecular genetics allow for collecting reliable presence records

that could be used to construct realistic species distribution based on

empirical data and advanced mathematical approaches like MaxEnt. The

current study followed this approach to construct an accurate

distribution of the species in Pakistan. Moreover, movement corridors,

among different landscapes, were also identified through circuit theory.

The probability of habitat suitability, generated from 98 presence

points and 11 environmental variables, scored the snow leopard’s assumed

range in Pakistan, from 0 to 0.97. A large portion of the known range

represented low-quality habitat, including areas in lower Chitral, Swat,

Astore, and Kashmir. Conversely, Khunjerab, Misgar, Chapursan, Qurumber,

Broghil, and Central Karakoram represented high-quality habitats.

Variables with higher contributions in the MaxEnt model were

precipitation during the driest month (34%), annual mean temperature

(19.5%), mean diurnal range of temperature (9.8%), annual precipitation

(9.4%), and river density (9.2). The model was validated through

receiver operating characteristic (ROC) plots and defined thresholds.

The average test AUC in Maxent for the replicate runs was 0.933 while

the value of AUC by ROC curve calculated at 0.15 threshold was 1.00.

These validation tests suggested a good model fit and strong predictive

power. The connectivity analysis revealed that the population in the

Hindukush landscape appears to be more connected with the population in

Afghani- stan as compared to other populations in Pakistan. Similarly,

the Pamir-Karakoram population is better connected with China and

Tajikistan, while the Himalayan population was connected with the

population in India. Based on our findings we propose three model

landscapes to be considered under the Global Snow Leopard Ecosystem

Protection Program (GSLEP) agenda as regional priority areas, to

safeguard the future of the snow leopard in Pakistan and the region.

These landscapes fall within mountain ranges of the Himalaya, Hindu Kush

and Karakoram-Pamir, respectively. We also identified gaps in the

existing protected areas network and suggest new protected areas in

Chitral and Gilgit-Baltistan to protect critical habitats of snow

leopard in Pakistan.
 
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  Area Expedition Conference  
  Notes Approved no  
  Call Number Serial 1617  
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Author Farrington, J., Tsering, D. url 
  Title Snow leopard distribution in the Chang Tang region of Tibet, China Type Journal Article
  Year 2020 Publication Global Ecology and Conservation Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 23 Issue Pages  
  Keywords (down)  
  Abstract In 2006 and 2007, the authors conducted human-wildlife conflict surveys in the Tibet Autonomous Region’s (TAR) Shainza, Nyima, and Tsonyi Counties, located in the TAR’s remote Chang Tang region. At this time, prior knowledge of the snow leopard in this vast 700,000 km2 region was limited to just eight firsthand snow leopard sign and conflict location records and 15 secondhand records. These surveys revealed a previously undocumented and growing problem of human-snow leopard conflict. The 2007 survey also yielded 39 new snow leopard conflict incident locations and 24 new snow leopard sign locations. Next, snow leopard telephone interviews and mapping exercises were conducted with Tibet Forestry Bureau staff that yielded an additional 63 and 144 new snow leopard conflict and sighting location records, respectively. These 270 new snow leopard location records, together with 39 records collected by other observers from 1988 to 2009, were compiled into a snow leopard distribution map for the Chang Tang. This effort greatly expanded knowledge of the snow leopard’s distribution in this region which remains one of the least understood of the snow leopard’s key range areas. New knowledge gained on snow leopard distribution in the Chang Tang through this exercise will help identify human-snow leopard conflict hot spots and inform design of human-snow leopard conflict mitigation and conservation strategies for northwest Tibet. Nevertheless, extensive additional field verification work will be required to definitively delineate snow leopard distribution in the Chang Tang. Importantly, since 2006, a number of major transportation infrastructure projects have made the Chang Tang more accessible, including paving of highways, new railroads, and new airports. This has led to a greatly increased number of tourists visiting western Tibet, particularly Mt. Kailash and Lake Manasarovar. At the same time, large areas of the Chang Tang have been fenced for livestock pastures as part of government initiatives to allocate pasturelands to individual families. All three of these developments have a large potential to cause disturbance to snow leopards and their prey species, including by hindering their movements and degrading their habitat. Therefore, future conservation measures in the Chang Tang will need to insure that development activities and the growing number of visitors to the Chang Tang do not adversely affect the distribution of snow leopards and their prey species or directly degrade their habitat.  
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  Series Volume Series Issue Edition  
  ISSN ISBN Medium  
  Area Expedition Conference  
  Notes Approved no  
  Call Number SLN @ rakhee @ Serial 1601  
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