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Shahram Kaboodvandpour

Shahram Kaboodvandpour

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 17135001200
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Natural Resources
Address: Shahram Kaboodvandpour, Environmental Sciences Department, Natural Resources Faculty, University of Kurdistan, P.O.Box 416, Sanandaj, Iran. Post code: 66177-15175
Phone: 087 33620551

Research

Title
Habitat suitability and connectivity implications for the conservation of the Persian leopard along the Iran–Iraq border
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
core habitats, corridors, habitat fragmentation, large carnivores, Zagros Mountains
Year
2021
Journal Ecology and Evolution
DOI
Researchers Shahram Kaboodvandpour ، Kamran Almasieh ، Navid Zamani

Abstract

Habitat fragmentation has major negative impacts on wildlife populations, and the connectivity could reduce these negative impacts. This study was conducted to assess habitat suitability and structural connectivity of the Persian leopard along the Iran–Iraq border (i.e., the Zagros Mountains) and compare the situation of identified core habitats and connectivity with existing conservation areas (CAs). An ensemble modeling approach resulting from five models was used to predict habitat suitability. To identify core habitats and corridors along the Iran–Iraq border, factorial leastcost path analyses were applied. The results revealed that topographic roughness, distance to CAs, annual precipitation, vegetation/cropland density, and distance to rivers were the most influential variables for predicting the occurrence of the Persian leopard in the study area. By an estimated dispersal distance of 82 km (suggested by previous studies), three core habitats were identified (two cores in Iran and one core in Iraq). The largest cores were located in the south and the center of the study area, which had the highest connectivity priorities. The connectivity from these cores was maintained to the core within the Iraqi side. Only about one-fifth of detected core habitats and relative corridors were protected by CAs in the study area. Detected core habitats and connectivity areas in this study could be an appropriate road map to accomplish the CAs network along the Iran–Iraq border regarding Persian leopard conservation. Establishing transboundary CAs, particularly in the core habitat located in the center of the study area, is strongly recommended to conserve existing large carnivores, including the Persian leopard