# Identification of Ecological Corridors for Semi‐Aquatic Vertebrates: A Case of the Eurasian Otter in Northeast China

**Authors:** Qingyi Wang, Aihua Fu, Wendi Yang, Minhao Chen, Chao Zhang, Xiaofeng Luan

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.72429 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-11-02

## TL;DR

This study identifies ecological corridors for Eurasian otters in Northeast China to improve conservation of freshwater ecosystems.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel approach to model and identify ecological corridors for semi-aquatic vertebrates in a specific region.

## Key findings

- The models predicted suitable habitats along rivers in forested mountainous areas like Daxing'anling, Xiaoxing'anling, and Changbai Mountains.
- The study identified 42 ecological corridors, 39 core habitats, and 78 pinch points, but noted significant protection gaps.
- Only 11.92% of suitable habitats and 18.66% of ecological corridors are currently protected, highlighting the need for improved conservation strategies.

## Abstract

As an indicator and flagship species of freshwater ecosystems, the Eurasian otter (
Lutra lutra
) plays a significant role in maintaining the connectivity and stability of ecosystems. However, compared with terrestrial and marine ecosystems, the conservation of freshwater ecosystems and species has not been sufficiently emphasized. In particular, research on the habitats and ecological corridors of semi‐aquatic vertebrates remains inadequate. This study employed species distribution models and corridor construction models to predict the distribution range of suitable habitats and identify the ecological corridors and key points for the Eurasian otter in Northeast China. The results showed that our models demonstrated good performance in species distribution model evaluation/validation, with average True Skill Statistic (TSS) and Area Under the Curve (AUC) values of 0.934 and 0.995 respectively. The model predicted that the suitable habitats of the Eurasian otter were mainly distributed along the rivers in the forested mountainous areas including the Daxing'anling Mountains, the Xiaoxing'anling Mountains, and the Changbai Mountains. Moreover, there were 39 core habitats, 42 ecological corridors, 78 pinch points and 19 barrier points identified. Among these, 11.92% of the suitable habitats, 25.83% of the core habitats and 18.66% of the ecological corridors were included in the scope of protected areas, but there were still protection gaps. In the future, anthropogenic disturbances in the Northeast China Forest Belt should be strictly controlled, and the integrated protection of forest and freshwater ecosystems should be strengthened so as to improve ecosystem and species connectivity.

This study employed species distribution models and corridor construction models to predict the distribution range of suitable habitats and identify the ecological corridors and key points for the Eurasian otter in Northeast China. There were 39 core habitats, 42 ecological corridors, 78 pinch points and 19 barrier points identified. Among these, 11.92% of the suitable habitats, 25.83% of the core habitats and 18.66% of the ecological corridors were included in the scope of protected areas, but there were still protection gaps. In the future, anthropogenic disturbances in the Northeast China Forest Belt should be strictly controlled, and the integrated protection of forest and freshwater ecosystems should be strengthened so as to improve ecosystem and species connectivity.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Lutra lutra (taxon 9657)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Acris blanchardi (Blanchard's cricket frog, species) [taxon 2782222], Moschidae (musk deer, family) [taxon 30533], Lithobates sylvaticus (wood frog, species) [taxon 45438], Loxodonta africana (African bush elephant, species) [taxon 9785], Loxodonta (African elephants, genus) [taxon 9784], Emydoidea blandingii (Blanding's turtle, species) [taxon 85613], Aves (birds, class) [taxon 8782], Lutrogale perspicillata (Smooth-coated otter, species) [taxon 452644], Alburnus alburnus (bleak, species) [taxon 54556], Moschus moschiferus (Siberian musk deer, species) [taxon 68415], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Neogale vison (American mink, species) [taxon 452646], Lutra lutra (Eurasian river otter, species) [taxon 9657], Castoridae (beavers, family) [taxon 29132], Grus japonensis (Japanese crane, species) [taxon 30415], Squalius cephalus (chub, species) [taxon 8284], Glyptemys muhlenbergii (bog turtle, species) [taxon 335393]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12580232/full.md

## References

182 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12580232/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12580232