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Panthera pardus

Taxonomy (Name)

Class MAMMALIAIUCN
Order CARNIVORAIUCN
Family FELIDAEIUCN
Scientific Name Panthera pardusIUCN
Author (Linnaeus, 1758)IUCN
Synonyms  
Common Name LeopardIUCN
Local name Brunei Darussalam  
Cambodia  
China  
Indonesia Macan kumbang, Macan tutul
Japan  
Lao PDR  
Malaysia Harimau Bintang, Harimau Kumbang
Myanmar  
Mongolia  
Philippines  
Singapore  
Republic of Korea  
Thailand ???????, ??????
Vietnam  

 

Picture

 

 

Distribution, Range

The leopard occurs across most of sub-Saharan Africa, as remnant populations in North Africa, and then in the Arabian peninsula and Sinai/Judean Desert (Egypt/Israel/Jordan), south-western and eastern Turkey, and through Southwest Asia and the Caucasus into the Himalayan foothills, India, China and the Russian Far East, as well as on the islands of Java and Sri Lanka (Nowell and Jackson 1996; Sunquist and Sunquist 2002; Hunter et al. in press).

In sub-Saharan Africa, leopards remain widely, albeit now patchily, distributed within historical limits (see Hunter et al. in press, and references therein). Ray et al. (2005) estimated that leopards have disappeared from at least 36.7% of their historical range in Africa. The most marked range loss has been in the Sahel belt, as well as in Nigeria and South Africa. They have been locally extirpated from areas densely populated with people or where habitat conversion is extreme (Hunter et al. in press). They are likely extinct on Zanzibar, where there have been no confirmed records since 1996 (Hunter et al. in press).

In North Africa, a tiny relict population persists in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco (Cuzin 2003), and there was a probable observation on the Morocco-Algerian border in Figuig in 2007 (F. Cuzin pers. comm.), while a population was recently found in the Ahaggar of south-eastern Algeria, a region from which they had not previously been recorded (Busby et al. 2006). Leopard are likely extinct in Egypt, although they may occur in the Eastern Desert (Hunter et al. in press).

A 2006 Arabian Fauna Conservation Workshop estimated there were fewer than 200 leopards remaining on the Arabian peninsula, in three confirmed separate subpopulations: the Negev desert, the Wada'a mountains of Yemen, and the Dhofar mountains of Oman. Presence in Saudi Arabia is uncertain (Breitenmoser 2006, Spalton and Al Hikmani 2006).

I. Khorozyan (pers. comm. 2008) compiled detailed country information on the distribution of the Endangered Persian leopard as follows:

Russian North Caucasus: mountain ridges in the headwaters of the Avarskoe Koisu and Andiiskoe Koisu rivers (Republic of Dagestan). Possibly exists in the Chegem River canyon (Kabardino-Balkarian Republic); Erzi Reserve, Assa River valley (Republic of Ingushetia); Armkhi River basin (Republic of North Osetia-Alania), headwaters of the Sharoargun and Argun rivers (Chechen Republic) (Akkiev and Mokaev, 2006; Khorozyan and Abramov, 2007; Lukarevsky et al., 2007).

Georgia: Vashlovani Reserve in the south-east; Arkhoti River canyon in the upper part of the Assa River basin and the headwaters of the Andiiskoe Koisu River in the north-east (Lukarevsky et al., 2007). Some anecdotal records from south-western Georgia are either unreliable or can be attributed to individuals coming from north-eastern Turkey (Arabuli, 2006; Khorozyan and Abramov, 2007).

Armenia: south-western and southern parts of the country from Khosrov Reserve to the Armenian-Iranian state border throughout the Geghama, Zangezur, Aiotsdzor, Bargushat and Meghri ridges. The range boundaries are the Azat River in the north-west; Vardenis Ridge in the north; semi-desert of the Ararat Valley in the west; state border with Azerbaijan and the alpine meadow/nival belt transition zone in the south-west and east; Arax River basin along the Armenian-Iranian border in the south. Until the early 1970s it lived also in north-eastern parts of Armenia (Khorozyan et al., 2005; Khorozyan and Abramov, 2007).

Azerbaijan: Talysh Mts. in the extreme south-east, Akhar-Bakhar Ridge of the Iori-Mingechaur Highland in the north-west and the Zangezur Ridge in the Nakhichevan Republic along the state border with Armenia in the west (Lukarevsky et al., 2007).

Nagorno-Karabakh Republic: distribution in Shushi, Mardakert and Hadrut districts and in the adjoining Kelbajar district was recorded in 1941-1967 (Alekperov, 1966; Sludsky, 1973). Up-to-date information on leopard status is impossible to obtain for the political tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan over this republic, even though it plays a vital role as a corridor between the southern (Armenia, Azerbaijan?s Nakhichevan Republic), central (Iori-Mingechaur Highland in Azerbaijan and Vashlovani Reserve in Georgia) and northern (Russian North Caucasus) parts of the Caucasus (Khorozyan and Abramov, 2007).

Iran: virtually all country, except the vast deserts of Desht-e-Kevir and Desht-e-Lut in central and eastern parts. Particularly common in the Alborz Mts. along the southern fringe of the Caspian Sea. Quite common in protected areas (e.g., Tandooreh, Sarigol, Bafgh, Golestan, Kolah?ghazy, Touran, Kavir, Khojir, Khabr and Bamu national parks; Kiamaki and Naybandan wildlife refuges; Jahan Nama, Central Alborz, Varjin, Arasbaran, Dena and Bahram?gur protected areas) and some unprotected lands (Chapur-Ghoymeh, Safee Abad-Dozain or Minoo Dasht, Ramsar, Khaeez and Darestan-Rudbar) (Joslin and Shoemaker 1988; Kiabi et al., 2002; Farhadinia et al. 2007; Abdoli et al. 2008; M Farhadinia and A. Ghoddousi pers. comms., 2008).

Turkey: north-east (around the Artvin city), east (vicinities of Mt. Ararat or Agri) and south-east (Bitlis Ridge). Possibly exists in the mountains of the Black Sea coast and south-westwards to the Taurus Mts. (H. Diker pers. comm., 2008). It is unclear whether leopards still survive in western Turkey.

Turkmenistan: western Kopetdag Ridge, central Kopetdag Ridge, eastern Kopetdag Ridge, Badkhyz Reserve and Giaz-Gyadyk Ridge (Lukarevsky, 2001).

Afghanistan: central (Hindu Kush, Kohe Baba, Kohe Paghman and Safed Koh ranges of the central highlands), north-eastern (Wakhan corridor) and northern (Darkad peninsula of Badakshan) parts of the country (Habibi, 2004).

In the Central Asian republics, leopard distribution is poorly known. Historically, leopards had a wider distribution in Turkmenistan, and were found in parts of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. An old male leopard was killed by a local hunter in January 2000 in Kazakhstan, the first record of the species in this country, in a location over 600 km from possible occurrences in Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, and over 1,200 km from known occurrences in Turkmenistan. It is aplso possible that the leopard travelled along the foothills of the Pamirs, then proceeded via the Ugam and Pskem ranges into the Talas river valley. Habitat appears to be suitable, but the existence of any leopard subpopulation in any of these three countries is uncertain (Shakula 2004).

In Pakistan, the leopard is thinly distributed in montane areas, and there have only been a handful of confirmed records in recent years (Ahmed 2001).

Leopards occur widely in the forests of the Indian sub-continent, through Southeast Asia and into China, although they are becoming increasingly rare outside protected areas. They are not found on the islands of Borneo or Sumatra (Nowell and Jackson 1996).

IUCN

Map

Country

Brunei Darussalam  
Cambodia checkIUCN
China checkIUCN
Indonesia checkIUCN
Japan  
Lao PDR checkIUCN
Malaysia checkIUCN
Myanmar checkIUCN
Mongolia  
Philippines  
Singapore  
Republic of Korea  
Thailand checkIUCN
Vietnam checkIUCN

 

Status

International Status

IUCN Red List Category

NTIUCN

Justification

Leopards have a wide range and are locally common in some parts of Africa and tropical Asia. However, they are declining in large parts of their range due to habitat loss and fragmentation, and hunting for trade and pest control. These threats may be significant enough that the species could soon qualify for Vulnerable under criterion A.

IUCN

CITES

Appendix IIUCN

CMS

 

National Status

Country Category Reference
Brunei Darussalam    
Cambodia EN Endangered Spacies in Cambodia(WWF)
http://cambodia.panda.org/wwf_in_cambodia/endangered_species
China E China Red Data book of Endangered Animals(1998)
(Extinct, Extirpated, Endangered, Vulnerable, Rare, Interninate)
Indonesia    
Japan    
Korea RE Korean Red List of Threatened Species(NIBR, 2012)
Lao PDR ARL Wildlife in Lao PDR, 1999 Status Report(IUCN, 1999)
(At Risk in Lao, Conditionally At Risk, Little Known, not applicable, Potentially At Risk)
Malaysia EN Red List of Mammals for Peninsular Malaysia(DWNP, 2010)
Mongolia    
Myanmar    
Philippines    
Singapore    
Thailand VU Thailand Red Data: Mammals, Reptiles and Amphibians(Nabhitabhata and Chan-ard, 2005)
Vietnam E Red Data Book of Vietnam(2000)
(Endangered, Vulnerable, Rare, Threatened)

 

Ecology Discription

Appearance

 

Habitat

The leopard has the widest habitat tolerance of any Old World felid, ranging from rainforest to desert. In Africa, they are most successful in woodland, grassland savanna and forest but also occur widely in mountain habitats, coastal scrub, swampy areas, shrubland, semi-desert and desert. They range from sea level to as much as 4,600 m on Mt Kenya (Hunter et al. in press). In Southwest and Central Asia, leopards formerly occupied a range of habitats, but now are confined chiefly to the more remote montane and rugged foothill areas. Through India and Southeast Asia, Leopard are found in all forest types, from tropical rainforest to the temperate deciduous and alpine coniferous (up to 5,200 m in the Himalaya), and also occur in dry scrub and grasslands (Nowell and Jackson 1996).

IUCN

Population size

The leopard is an adaptable, widespread species that nonetheless has many threatened subpopulations. While still numerous and even thriving in some marginal habitats from which other big cats have disappeared in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, in North Africa leopards are on the verge of extinction.

There are no reliable continent-wide estimates of population size in Africa, and the most commonly cited estimate of over 700,000 leopards in Africa (Martin and de Meulenaar 1988) is flawed. In India, based on pugmark censuses (a methodology which has been criticized as inaccurate), 9,844 leopards were estimated in 2001. Many populations are believed to be increasing (Singh 2005), and there are high levels of human-leopard conflict (Singh et al. 2008).

Several Asian subspecies are included on the Red List, with population information as follows:

Amur leopard P.p. orientalis CR C2a(ii),D: 14-20 (Anon. 2007)
Arabian leopard P.p. nimr CR C2a(I): <200 (Breitenmoser 2006, Spalton and Al Hikmani 2006)
Javan leopard P.p. melas CR C2a(i): 323-525, with <250 mature breeding adults (A. Ario pers. comm. 2007)
Sri Lankan leopard P.p. kotiya EN C2a(i): 700-950 (Kittle and Watson 2007)
Persian leopard P.p. saxicolor EN C2a(i): 871-1290 (Khorozyan et al., 2005; Lukarevsky et al. 2007)

IUCN

Behavior

Leopards have extremely catholic diets including more than 90 species in sub-Saharan Africa, ranging from arthropods to large antelope up to the size of adult male Eland Tragelaphus oryx (Hunter et al. in press). Densities vary with habitat, prey availability, and degree of threat, from fewer than one per 100 km2 to over 30 per 100 km2, with highest densities obtained in protected East and southern African mesic woodland savannas (Hunter et al. in press).

A study in Thailand found a home range of 8.8 km2 for a radio-collared female, and 17.3-18 km2 for two adult males (Grassman 1998). Important prey species were hog badger Arctonyx collaris (45.9%), muntjac Muntiacus muntjak (20.9%) and wild pig Sus scrofa (6.3%).

IUCN

Diet

Important prey species were hog badger Arctonyx collaris (45.9%), muntjac Muntiacus muntjak (20.9%) and wild pig Sus scrofa (6.3%).

IUCN

Reproduction

 

 

Threat

Major Threat(s)

Throughout Africa, the major threats to Leopard are habitat conversion and intense persecution, especially in retribution for real and perceived livestock loss (Ray et al. 2005). In intact rainforest, the chief threat to Leopards is probably competition with human hunters for prey; the tremendous volume of wild meat harvests denudes forests of prey and may drive localized extinctions. Nonetheless, Leopard are somewhat tolerant of habitat conversion, and may persist close to large human populations provided they have suitable cover and prey (Hunter et al. in press).

Leopard come into conflict with people across their range. A rapidly increasing threat to Leopards is the poisoning of carcasses targeting carnivores, either as a means of predator control or incidentally.

The impact of trophy hunting on populations is unclear, but may have impacts at the demographic and population level, especially when females are shot. In Tanzania, which allows only males to be hunted, females comprised 28.6% of 77 trophies shot between 1995 and 1998 (Spong et al. 2000).

Skins and canines are still widely traded domestically in some central and West African countries where parts are used in traditional rituals and sold openly in villages and cities (Hunter et al. in press). Djibouti is an important conduit for Leopard skins from East Africa that are bought mainly by French military personnel and carried illegally to Europe.

In West Asia, small leopard subpopulations are threatened primarily by habitat fragmentation, killing in defence of livestock, and poaching for trade (Habibi 2004, Breitenmoser et al. 2006, Breitenmoser et al. 2007).

In Indo-Malaya, leopards are threatened primarily by habitat loss (deforestation) as well as poaching for illegal trade (Nowell and Jackson 1996). In India, leopards are feared for their attacks on people (Singh 2005).

IUCN

 

Conservation and Measurement

International

Included on CITES Appendix I. Legal international traffic is limited largely to exports of skins and hunting trophies under a CITES Appendix I quota system by 13 African countries (2005 CITES quota is 2,590).

IUCN

National

Leopards are protected under national legislation throughout most of their range (Nowell and Jackson 1996). In Africa, although Leopards occur in numerous protected areas across their range, the majority of the population occurs outside of protected areas, necessitating a need for improved conflict mitigation measures (including livestock management, conflict resolution) (Hunter et al. in press). In West Asia, leopards are essentially restricted to protected areas, many of which are too small to support viable populations, and need expansion through buffer zones and connectivity through corridors (Breitenmoser et al. 2006, 2007). In Indo-Malaya and China, leopards need better protection from illegal trade in skins and bones (Nowell 2007). Leopards are protected in Afghanistan having recently been placed on the country?s Protected Species List (2009), prohibiting all hunting and trading of the species within Afghanistan.

IUCN

Conservation law

Country Status Reference
Brunei Darussalam    
Cambodia    
China    
Indonesia Protected Animals Goverment Regulation no. 7 / 1999, about Preservation of Plants and Animals
Japan    
Korea Endengered Species Category Ⅰ Wildlife Protection Act
Lao PDR    
Malaysia Totally Protected Wild Animals Law of Malaysia Act 76, Protection of Wild Life Act 1972
(Amend. 2006)
Mongolia    
Myanmar Completely Protected Animals Protection of Wildlife, Wild Plants and Conservation of Natural Areas Act 15(A), Forest Department Notification No. 583/94
Philippines    
Singapore    
Thailand    
Vietnam Group I: Prohibiting Exploitation and Use for Commercial Purposes The Government Decree 32/2006/ND-CP, Dated 30th March 2006 on Management of Endangered, Precious and Rare Species of Wild Plants and Animals

Protected Area

 

Other Coservation Projects

 

 

Citation

Abdoli, A., Ghadirian, T., Khaleghi Hamidi, A., Mostafavi, H., Moshiri, H., Pour?salem, S. and Ghoddousi, A. 2008. Photo of a Persian leopard from Khaeez area in southern Iran. Cat News 48: 14.

Ahmed, N. 2001. Distribution of leopards in Pakistan.

Akkiev, M. I. and Mokaev, A. B. 2006. The leopard (Felidae, Carnivora) in Kabardino-Balkarian Republic (Central Caucasus), its historical and modern status. In: E. P. Kononenko (ed.), "Problemy ekologii gornykh territorii? [Ecological issues of mountainous areas], pp. 9-13. KMK, Moscow, Russia.

Alekperov, H. M. 1966. Mlekopitayuschie yugo-zapadnogo Azerbaijana (Mammals of south-western Azerbaijan). Azerb. SSR Acad. Sci. Press, Baku, Azerbaijan.

Anonymous. 2007. Amur leopard remains on the brink of extinction. Cat News 46: 51.

Arabuli, A. B. 2006. On distribution of the leopard (Panthera pardus ciscaucasica) in the southern Caucasus (Georgia). Zoologicheckii zhurnal 85: 910-912.

Breitenmoser, U. 2006. 7th Conservation Workshop for the Fauna of Arabia 19-22 February: Workshop report. Breeding Center for Endangered Arabian Wildlife, Sharjah, UAE.

Breitenmoser, U., Breitenmoser-Wursten, C., Morschel, F., Zazanashvili, N. and Sylven, M. 2007. General conditions for the conservation of the leopard in the Caucasus. Cat News Special Issue No. 2: 34-39.

Breitenmoser, U., Mallon, D. and Breitenmoser-Wursten, C. 2006. A framework for the conservation of the Arabian leopard. Cat News Special Issue 1: 44-47.

Busby, G. B. J., Gottelli, D., Durant, S., Wacher, T., Marker, L., Belbachir, F., de Smet, K., Belbachir-Bazi, A., Fellous, A. and Belghoul, M. 2006. A Report from the Sahelo Saharan Interest Group - Parc National de l'Ahaggar Survey, Algeria (March 2005). Part 5: Using Molecular Genetics to study the Presence of Endangered Carnivores.

Cuzin, F. 2003. Les grands mammiferes du Maroc meridional (Haut Atlas, Anti Atlas et Sahara): Distribution, Ecologie et Conservation. Ph.D. Thesis, Laboratoire de Biogeographie et Ecologie des Vertebres, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Universite Montpellier II.

Farhadinia, M., Nezami, B., Mahdavi, A. and Hatami, K. 2007. Photos of Persian leopard in Alborz mountains, Iran. Cat News 46: 34-35.

Grassman Jr., L. I. 1998. Ecology and behavior of the Indochinese leopard (Panthera pardus delacouri) in a subtropical evergreen forest in southern Thailand. Societa Zoologica La Torbiera, IUCN.

Habibi, K. 2003. Mammals of Afghanistan. Zoo Outreach Organisation/ USFWS, Coimbatore, India.

Hunter L., Henschel, P. and Ray, J. C. In press. Panthera pardus. In: J. S. Kingdon and M. Hoffmann (eds), The Mammals of Africa, Academic Press, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

IUCN. 2008. 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Available at: http://www.iucnredlist.org. (Accessed: 5 October 2008).

Joslin, P. and Shoemaker, A. H. 1988. Leopards (Panthera pardus) in Iran. International Leopard Studbook, pp. 13. Riverbanks Zoological Park, Columbia,USA.

Khorozyan I. G. and Abramov A. V. 2007. The leopard, Panthera pardus (Carnivora: Felidae), and its resilience to human pressure in the Caucasus. Zoology in the Middle East 41: 11-24.

Khorozyan, I. G., Gennady, F., Baryshnikov, G. F. and Abramov, A. V. 2006. Taxonomic status of the leopard, Panthera pardus (Carnivora, Felidae) in the Caucasus and adjacent areas. Russian Journal of Theriology 5(1): 41-52.

Khorozyan, I., Malkhasyan, A. and Asmaryan, S. 2005. The Persian leopard prowls its way to survival. Endangered Species Update 22: 51-60.

Kiabi, B. H., Dareshouri, B. F., Ghaemi, R. A. and Jahanshahi, M. 2002. Population status of the Persian Leopard (Panthera pardus saxicolor Pocock, 1927) in Iran. Zoology in the Middle East 26: 41-47.

Kittle, A. and Watson, A. 2007. How many leopards are in Sri Lanka?: An estimate from field investigations. The Leopard Project, The Wilderness and Wildlife Conservation Trust.

Lukarevsky, V. 2001. The leopard, striped hyena and wolf in Turkmenistan [Leopard, polosataya giena i volk v Turkmenistane]. Signar Publishers, Moscow, Russia.

Lukarevsky, V., Malkhasyan, A. and Askerov, E. 2007. Biology and ecology of the leopard in the Caucasus. Cat News 2: 4-8.

Nowell,K. 2007. Asian big cat conservation and trade control in selected range States: evaluating implementation and effectiveness of CITES Recommendations. TRAFFIC International, Cambrudge, UK.

Nowell, K. and Jackson, P. 1996. Wild Cats. Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK.

Ray, J. C., Hunter, L. and Zigouris, J. 2005. Setting conservation and research priorities for larger African carnivores. Wildlife Conservation Society, New York, USA.

Shakula, V. 2004. First record of leopard in Kazakhstan. Cat News 41: 11-12.

Singh, H. S. 2005. Status of the leopard P. p. fusca in India. Cat News 42: 15-17.

Singh, U.S., Singh, R., Satyanarayan, K. and Seshamani, G. 2008. Conservation and science: human-leopard conflict study in Jammu and Kashmir, India, to bridge the gap between community and wildlife. Annual meeting of the International Congress for Conservation Biology, Convention Center, Chattanooga, TN.

Sludsky, A. A. 1973. Distribution and number of wild cats in the USSR. Trudy Instituta zoologii AN KazSSR 34: 5-106.

Spalton, J. A. and Al Hikmain, H. M. 2006. The leopard in the Arabian peninsula - distribution and subspecies status. Cat News 1: 4-8.

Spong, G., Johansson, M. and Bjorklund, M. 2000. High genetic variation in leopards indicates large and long-term stable effective population size. Molecular Ecology 9: 1773-1782.

Sunquist, M. and Sunquist, F. 2002. Wild Cats of the World. University of Chicago Press.

Uphyrkina, O., Johnson, W. E., Quigley, H. B., Miquelle, D. G., Marker, L., Bush, M. E. and O'Brien, S. J. 2001. Phylogenetics, genome diversity and origin of modern leopard, Panthera pardus. Molecular Ecology 10: 2617.

IUCN