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Search Word: Mammal, Search Result: 4
1
Kyungmin Kim(Wildlife Disease Respond Team, National Institute of Wildlife Disease Control and Prevention) ; Yoonjung Yi(College of Biology and the Environment, Nanjing Forestry University) ; Donggul Woo(Ecological Space Research Team, Division of Ecosystem Assessment, National Institute of Ecology) ; Taejin Park(Ecological Space Research Team, Division of Ecosystem Assessment, National Institute of Ecology) ; Euigeun Song(Ecological Space Research Team, Division of Ecosystem Assessment, National Institute of Ecology) 2021, Vol.2, No.4, pp.274-278 https://doi.org/10.22920/PNIE.2021.2.4.274
초록보기
Abstract

Road structures play an important role in collisions involving vehicles and wildlife. Our study aimed to determine the effect of various types of road structures on the risk associated with roadkill. We surveyed 50 previously identified roadkill hotspots, ranked from one to five according to roadkill density. We collected nine types of road structure data on each hotspot road section. Structures with similar characteristics were grouped together, resulting in five categories, namely, median barrier, high edge barrier, low edge barrier, speed, and visibility. We examined the existence of each road structure category at each hotspot rank. The cumulative link model showed that the absence of bottom blocked median barrier increased the roadkill hotspot rank. Our study concluded that a visual obstacle in the middle of roads by the median barrier decreases wildlife road crossing attempts and roadkill risk. We suggest that future roadkill mitigation plans should be established considering these characteristics.


2
Yong-Ki Kim(Ecoinformatics & Control Institute) ; Jeong-Boon Lee(Ecoinformatics & Control Institute) ; Sung Je Lee(National Institute of Ecology) ; Jang Sam Cho(National Institute of Ecology) ; Hyosun Leem(National Institute of Ecology) 2023, Vol.4, No.1, pp.9-15 https://doi.org/10.22920/PNIE.2023.4.1.9
초록보기
Abstract

We analyzed data of endangered mammals in the 1st grade zone of the Ecological and Natural Map of Korea that were obtained through 202 field surveys over six years. Five endangered mammal species were identified including otters, long-tailed gorals, martens, leopard cats, and flying squirrels. The total number of habitat traces collected was 918, of which 897 traces (97.7%) were excrement types. The total surveyed distance was 697.7 km and there were 2,184 grids of 250×250 m each. Of these grids, 441 or 20.2% were confirmed as habitats of endangered mammals. Moreover, we analyzed results of repeated surveys in the same area by converting them into individual one-time surveys, accounting for 23.1% of the total area. The flying squirrel showed a low correlation with the frequency of field surveys but showed many habitats in a specific season. Leopard cats and martens were correlated with the frequency of field surveys. Results of analysis confirm that the grid method used for establishing the Ecological and Natural Map is unsuitable for the habitat division of flying squirrels, otters, leopard cats, and martens, and it does not reflect the actual habitats of these four species. Therefore, we propose that the concept of the habitat grid of species must be reevaluated and improved, specifically for endangered mammals.


3
Seung Woo Han(Institute for Sustainable Development, Seoul National University) ; Sung Yong Han(Korean Otter Research Center) 2022, Vol.3, No.1, pp.1-6 https://doi.org/10.22920/PNIE.2022.3.1.1
초록보기
Abstract

Among the 13 species of otters in the world, only one Eurasian otter (Lutra lutr) is found in South Korea. In the Korean Peninsula, otter pelts were historically valuable and expensive commodities used for international trade, and otters have long been poached as hunting animals. Recent rapid economic development in South Korea has increased habitat fragmentation and loss, creating a continuing threat to the natural environment. Otters live only in the area of rivers and streams as a family group and are territorial (linear habitat). Due to these limited conditions of otter habitat, the population size of otter is lower than that of onshore mammals. According to recent research, DNA analyses using microsatellite markers have shown that only approximately 7-21 otter individuals inhabit river systems for a length of 50-230 km. Korea's urban streams are associated with many threats that hinder otters from inhabiting them. Many areas around the urban streams are surrounded by high concrete riverbanks, and the risk of roadkill is also high. Nevertheless, ecological restoration projects in the urban rivers will contribute greatly to the stable inhabitation of otters. Detailed otter conservation strategies, such as the elimination of threat factors, improvement of habitat environment, and restoration of food resources and shelter, will provide a positive restoration effect on otter and river ecosystems as well.


4
Yoonjeong Heo(School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University) ; Hyohyemi Lee(National Institute of Ecology) 2022, Vol.3, No.2, pp.115-121 https://doi.org/10.22920/PNIE.2022.3.2.115
초록보기
Abstract

The Yezo sika deer (Cervus nippon yesoensis) is a subspecies of sika deer originated from Hokkaido, Japan. This paper is a study on the ecological impact caused by large mammals invading the ecosystem. Two pairs of deer were donated to the Agency for Defense Development in Taean in the late 1980s, and the population expanded to over 280 in 2018. The thermal imaging camera showed that the population ranged from 8 to 53 herds, divided into approximately 10 groups. It was confirmed that some of the herds had escaped the management area and invaded the nearby natural ecosystem, causing damage to cultivated land and natural vegetation. Herds of over 50 individuals have been studied in large grassland areas near drinking water sources such as streams and ponds. In places with excessive deer concentration, 1) feeding damage to herbs, shrubs and sub-trees, 2) tree withering due to antler-rubbing, and their habit of migrating along forest edges 3) excessive soil loss on slopes, 4) destruction of herbaceous layers due to compaction, and finally 5) damage to infrastructure were also investigated. As such, it is expected that the results of this study on the ecological and economic damage of Yezo sika deer can be used to predict the impact of other exotic sika deer in South Korea with similar behavioral characteristics and to establish a management plan.


Proceedings of the National Institute of Ecology of the Republic of Korea