Measuring ecosystem services and ecological sensitivity for comprehensive conservation in Giant Panda National Park

Author:

Li Cheng12,Hou Rong2,Bao Ziqiang1,Wu Wei2,Owens Jacob R.3,Bi Wenlei2,Xu Qiang4,Gu XiaoDong5,Xiang Zuofu16,Qi Dunwu12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Life Science and Technology Central South University of Forestry and Technology Changsha China

2. Sichuan Key Laboratory of Conservation Biology for Endangered Wildlife Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding Chengdu China

3. Los Angeles Zoo & Botanical Gardens Los Angeles California USA

4. World Wide Fund for Nature, China Office Beijing China

5. Sichuan Forestry and Grassland Bureau Chengdu China

6. College of Forestry Central South University of Forestry & Technology Changsha China

Abstract

AbstractChina announced the development of its first 5 national parks in 2021, the primary objective of which is to conserve the natural state and integrity of natural ecosystems. As such, ecosystem services and biodiversity levels are crucial assessment factors for the parks. For Giant Panda National Park (GPNP), we evaluated ecological sensitivity based on water and soil erosion and rocky desertification; ecosystem services based on headwater conservation, soil and water conservation, and biodiversity conservation; and presence of giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) and sympatric species (e.g., takin [Budorcas taxicolor], Asiatic black bear [Ursus thibetanus]) habitat suitability derived from niche modeling to identify the ecosystem status and assess ecological problems within the park. From our results, we proposed ecologically critical areas to target to meet the park's goals. The suitable habitat for pandas and sympatric species encompassed 62.98% of the park and occurred mainly in the Minshan Mountains. One quarter of the total area (25.67%) contained areas important for ecosystem services. Ecologically sensitive and extremely sensitive areas covered 88.78% of the park and were distributed mainly in Qionglaishan and Minshan Mountains. This coverage indicated that there was much habitat for pandas and sympatric species but that the ecosystems in GPNP are vulnerable. Therefore, ecologically critical areas encompassed all suitable habitats for all the species examined and areas important and extremely important to ecosystem service provision,ecologically sensitive and extremely sensitive areas, encompassed 15.17% of panda habitat, accounted for 16.37% of the GPNP area, and were distributed mainly in the Minshan Mountains. Our results indicated where conservation efforts should be focused in the park and that by identifying ecologically critical areas managers can provide targeted protection for wildlife habitat and ecosystems and effectively and efficiently protect the composite ecosystem. Additionally, our methods can be used to inform development of new national parks.

Funder

Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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