Distribution of the Asiatic golden cat (Catopuma temminckii) and variations in its coat morphology in China

Author:

Duan Fei12ORCID,Zhu Shuyi23ORCID,Wang Yuan45ORCID,Song Dazhao6,Shen Xiaoli7ORCID,Li Sheng2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Natural History Museum of China Beijing China

2. School of Life Sciences & Institute of Ecology Peking University Beijing China

3. Wildlife Conservation Monitoring Center, National Forestry and Grassland Administration Beijing China

4. Research Institute of Natural Protected Area Chinese Academy of Forestry Beijing China

5. Tibet Autonomous Region Research Institute of Forestry Inventory and Planning Lhasa China

6. Chinese Felid Conservation Alliance Beijing China

7. State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractOf the 12 wild felid species found in China, Asiatic golden cat (Catopuma temminckii) is one of the least studied species. This medium‐sized cat with a prominently polymorphic coat was once distributed across much of southern China, but is believed to have experienced severe decline and range contraction during the past decades, primarily due to anthropogenic pressures. A lack of knowledge of its current distribution, ecology, and natural history has greatly hindered the implementation of conservation and management actions for this species. In this study, for the first time, we compiled the state‐wide occurrence records (N = 409), mainly from the camera‐trapping surveys, of Asiatic golden cats from 2008 to 2019, and predicted its distribution across the country through species distribution modeling using random forest algorithm. The results showed that the predicted habitats were mainly located in southwest China and suggested a rather low probability of possible current distribution across its vast historic range in central, eastern, and southern China. We divided its current range into four geographic regions (i.e., Qinling Mountains, Hengduan Mountains, East Himalayas, and southern Yunnan region) and considered the cats in each region as a regional population within the country. From the 287 camera‐trapping detections with photographs and/or videos collected across all populations, we identified six coat morphs and determined their occurrence percentages: common golden (47.4%), spotted (20.9%), red (13.6%), dark cinnamon (10.1%), melanistic (7.0%), and gray (1.0%). The complexity of coat morph composition within regional populations showed an increasing gradient from northeast to southwest. Among the four regional populations, the East Himalayas hosted the highest abundance and coat variation with all six morphs recorded. Our study results update the current distribution and coat morphology variations of this elusive cat in China and provide important knowledge to guide future research and conservation planning for this threatened species.

Funder

Peking University

Smithsonian Institution

Publisher

Wiley

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