# Estimating the 15th‐Century Potential Habitats of Endangered Mammals on the Korean Peninsula: Implications for Restoration

**Authors:** Dabin Kim, Kyung Ah. Koo

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71676 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-06-27

## TL;DR

This study estimates the 15th-century habitats of endangered mammals in Korea using historical records, offering insights for their restoration.

## Contribution

The novel use of historical documents to estimate past habitats of endangered mammals provides new insights for conservation.

## Key findings

- Endangered mammals like tigers and foxes had wide 15th-century habitats across the Korean Peninsula.
- Historical habitats were mainly in high-altitude mountainous areas with steep slopes.
- Foxes showed the broadest distribution, including non-forest regions.

## Abstract

Understanding the past distribution is valuable reference information for restoring endangered species that lack current suitable habitat information. We, thus, estimated the 15th‐century potential habitats of critically endangered mammals at the genus level on the Korean Peninsula with a historical document: big cats (Panthera spp.), including tigers and leopards, foxes (Vulpes spp.), bears (Ursus spp.), and gorals (Naemorhedus spp.). For this, we mapped the district‐based mammals' habitats using the tribute records of local mammalian products in Sejong Silok jiriji, a historical document written in the 1400s on a peninsula scale. The habitats of all mammal genera mainly included the Baekdudaegan mountain range, stretching from North to South Korea, and were commonly found in the two provinces of North Korea: Hamgyung‐do and Pyungan‐do. Especially, foxes showed the peninsula‐wide habitat distribution, including non‐forest areas. The common characteristics of their habitats were high‐altitude mountainous areas with steep slopes and rugged topography. Contrary to the current limited ranges of the corresponding mammal species on the Korean Peninsula, especially in South Korea, the 1400s estimations showed peninsula‐wide distributions of the four mammal genera. Despite several limitations of historical documents, such as presence‐only administrative and genus‐level information, estimating mammals' habitats using historical records is a novel and important approach, highlighting the value of these records in understanding past mammals' habitat distributions and characteristics. Our results provide valuable reference information for the restoration and conservation practices of the four critically endangered mammals, with limited knowledge of their suitable habitat conditions in the Republic of Korea.

We estimated the 15th‐century potential habitats of endangered mammals at the genus level on the Korean Peninsula with a historical document: big cats (Panthera spp.), including tigers and leopards, foxes (Vulpes spp.), bears (Ursus spp.), and gorals (Naemorhedus spp.). Estimating mammals' habitats using historical records is a novel and important approach; our results provide valuable reference information for the restoration of the four endangered mammals. Despite several limitations of historical documents, such as administrative and genus‐level information, our results highlight the value of these records in understanding past mammals' habitat distributions and characteristics.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Ursidae (bears, family) [taxon 9632], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Ursus (genus) [taxon 9639], Felis catus (cat, species) [taxon 9685], Panthera tigris (tiger, species) [taxon 9694], Panthera pardus (leopard, species) [taxon 9691]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12203234/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12203234