Loading…

Degradation, urbanization, and restoration: A review of the challenges and future of conservation on the Korean Peninsula

•We review the current state of conservation challenges on the Korean Peninsula.•The peninsula hosts many endemic species and is critical for bird migrations.•Conservation challenges include development, pollution, and deforestation.•Biodiversity on the peninsula is poorly documented. Documentation...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biological conservation 2014-08, Vol.176, p.262-276
Main Authors: Lee, Sang-Don, Miller-Rushing, Abraham J.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•We review the current state of conservation challenges on the Korean Peninsula.•The peninsula hosts many endemic species and is critical for bird migrations.•Conservation challenges include development, pollution, and deforestation.•Biodiversity on the peninsula is poorly documented. Documentation is improving.•Conservation solutions include habitat restoration and conservation planning. Human history on the Korean Peninsula has left natural resource managers with a number of serious challenges regarding the preservation of biodiversity and ecosystem functions. The Korean Peninsula covers 222,403km2 and contains a mountainous interior, many islands, and biodiversity-rich coastal and marine areas. Biodiversity on the peninsula is not well documented, especially in North Korea, but the peninsula is estimated to host at least 100,000 species, and perhaps manyfold more. Roughly 6% of species identified to date are endemic, and among vertebrate species in South Korea, 29% of mammals, 14% of birds, 23% of freshwater fishes, 48% of reptiles, and 60% of amphibians are estimated to be at risk of extinction or have been extirpated from the peninsula. The situation is likely worse in North Korea. Species still occurring on the Korean Peninsula have survived near total deforestation of the landscape, heavy fishing, pollution, and, in South Korea, a period of rapid urbanization since the end of the Korean War in 1953. Conservation challenges are particularly dire in North Korea, where environmental degradation has impaired the country’s ability to sustain agriculture, clean air and water, and other fundamental ecosystem services. Conservation faces significant challenges in South Korea, too, given the country’s goal to continue to develop one of the world’s most advanced and urbanized economies. Natural resource managers in both North and South Korea are pursuing large-scale restoration of forests, wetlands, lakes and rivers, and coastlines as a primary conservation strategy. In addition, South Korea is aggressively developing a “green economy” and is hosting international environmental meetings, attempting to take a leadership role as a convener of innovative thinking in conservation. North and South Korea are also implementing more common land protection techniques, such as the creation of national parks and other protected areas. These protected areas include the exceptional case of the 100,000-ha (250km×4km) Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) that forms the border between N
ISSN:0006-3207
1873-2917
DOI:10.1016/j.biocon.2014.05.010