Podrobná bibliografie
| Název: |
Nationwide Temporal Dynamics of Mammal Communities Across South Korea: Dominance Shifts and Predator—Prey Implications. |
| Autoři: |
Yi, Taewoo, Kim, Tae Gwan, Lee, Bae Keun, Park, Sol, Park, Jongchul, Lee, Junseok |
| Zdroj: |
Animals (2076-2615); Dec2025, Vol. 15 Issue 23, p3441, 14p |
| Témata: |
MAMMAL communities, ECOSYSTEM dynamics, ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring, PREDATION, HABITAT conservation, BIODIVERSITY conservation |
| Geografický termín: |
SOUTH Korea |
| Abstrakt: |
Simple Summary: This study analyzed long-term changes in mammal communities across the Korean Peninsula using data from the 3rd (2006–2013), 4th (2014–2018), and 5th (2019–2023) National Ecosystem Surveys. Results showed that a few adaptable species—particularly the water deer (Hydropotes inermis) and wild boar (Sus scrofa)—have become increasingly dominant, while smaller or specialist species such as the Korean hare (Lepus coreanus) have declined. These shifts are closely linked to forest recovery, human land-use changes, and the absence of top predators like the tiger (Panthera tigris). As forests recovered after decades of deforestation, large herbivores and omnivores benefited from improved habitat conditions. However, the observed dominance changes should be interpreted cautiously, as they may reflect both ecological shifts and survey methodology improvements. Over time, this has led to a simplified and unbalanced community structure, where a few generalist species dominate while overall diversity and evenness decline. The findings highlight the need for continued ecological monitoring and a better understanding of how habitat restoration and predator loss interact to shape wildlife communities on the Korean Peninsula. Understanding long-term changes in mammal communities is essential for evaluating ecosystem dynamics under large-scale environmental transformation. This study analyzed nationwide data from the 3rd (2006–2013), 4th (2014–2018), and 5th (2019–2023) National Ecosystem Surveys to assess temporal shifts in the abundance and dominance structure of medium- and large-sized mammals across the Korean Peninsula. Using standardized survey data, we compared changes in detection frequency, dominance rank, and diversity indices among survey phases. Results revealed a significant restructuring of dominance from the 3rd to 4th survey, followed by stabilization in the 5th phase, indicating a gradual simplification of community structure. The water deer remained the most dominant species throughout all surveys, while the wild boar showed a consistent increase in relative frequency. In contrast, smaller or specialist species such as the Korean hare exhibited notable declines. These patterns correspond to ecological changes driven by forest recovery and the absence of apex predators, which have facilitated the proliferation of adaptable generalist species. The findings suggest that ongoing habitat recovery, though beneficial for biomass and productivity, may simultaneously reduce functional diversity and community balance. This study highlights the value of long-term, standardized monitoring for identifying structural transitions in wildlife communities and understanding their broader implications for biodiversity conservation on the Korean Peninsula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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| Databáze: |
Biomedical Index |