How Geomorphology Maps the Dispersal Barriers of Large Herbivorous Mammals in China

Author:

Ren Yicheng1ORCID,Xu Ziyi1,Li Manyu1,Dai Wenyu1,Wang Jiechen12

Affiliation:

1. Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory of Geographic Information Science and Technology, Key Laboratory for Land Satellite Remote Sensing Applications of Ministry of Natural Resources, School of Geography and Ocean Science Nanjing University Nanjing China

2. Jiangsu Center for Collaborative Innovation in Geographical Information Resource Development and Application Nanjing China

Abstract

ABSTRACTAimLiterature and fossil records document the long‐term occurrence sites of large herbivorous mammals in China. These sites exhibit spatially uneven distribution, potentially reflecting constraints on the dispersal of large herbivorous mammals imposed by stable geomorphic factors. In this study, we examine the impact of landforms on the dispersal of four taxa of large herbivorous mammals across China.LocationChina.TaxonRhinocerotidae, Elephantidae, Equus, Camelus.MethodsWe employed the Omniscape algorithm to create a connectivity model from geomorphic data (slope, elevation and ground cover), assessing the extent to which Chinese landforms obstruct large herbivore dispersal. This model utilised historical distribution sites to delineate barrier strips.ResultsDispersal barriers show regional variation, segmenting China into four distinct regions. The Tibetan Plateau, Taklamakan Desert and Qinling Mountains constitute Region A, presenting the most significant barrier. Region B, characterised by dense, continuous mountain ranges and arid landforms in Northwest China, poses a secondary barrier. Region C, with fragmented mountain ranges in Southwest China, exhibits a diminished barrier effect. Region D features the eastern coastal plains with minimal geomorphic constraints.ConclusionsThe edge mountains of the Tibetan Plateau form a continuous barrier strip. The Qinling–Taihang–Yanshan mountain chain constitutes a discontinuous barrier strip. This is because the mountain chain belongs to two geological structural units and is eroded by rivers, creating many corridors.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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