Reserved Primorye: the land of rare cats, primeval taiga and sea oases. The unique nature of Primorsky Krai (brief description) Fauna of Primorsky Krai in brief

The earth speaks to us in the language of sounds, colors, smells. The voices of countless lives come from all directions. Loud and already barely perceptible, but always exciting and calling, and every silent voice is a great loss: the general chorus of life without it sounds weaker and quieter. The abundance and diversity of life in nature is the best indicator of her and our well-being. Responsive silence of the fields, secret forest jungles are infused, forests, steppes, mountains, seas are overflowing with life - and all is well! Open your eyes and the beauty of the earth will flood into you with waterfalls of colors. It is everywhere: around, overhead, underfoot. In the flight of a beast, in the flight of a bird, in the game of a fish. All living things are saturated with poetry and beauty. And we can all see and feel it, now, always, forever and ever..

Amur tiger longhair - the largest among tigers, agile, very strong and hardy cat with yellowish-buff long fur - constantly wanders in pursuit of wild boars, red deer and roe deer. Unlike other cats, it swims well and bathes willingly. This representative of tropical nature has adapted well to our harsh winters.The weight of the predator reaches 380 kg . Among the animals, the tiger has no enemies. Only a huge brown bear can compete with a tiger in strength. Fights between them sometimes end tragically for the tiger. The number of tigers in our region has greatly decreased, and hunting for them is prohibited. Sometimes only young tigers are captured for zoos.

East Asian leopard an animal with beautiful golden-yellow fur with intense black spots. He has so great speed running, which produces a "rut" of various ungulates. This bird climbs trees perfectly and, sprawling on a tree trunk, rushes from above to prey.

Amur forest cat - nocturnal predator feeding on rodents and small birds.

raccoon dog loves flat, meadow, swampy spaces with copses of broad-leaved species and with the proximity of the hearth. The food is extremely diverse - mouse-like rodents, fish, frogs and snakes, small birds, nuts, fruits of vines. It has valuable, beautiful, durable and warm fur, so it is almost exterminated. It leads a nocturnal lifestyle, hibernates for the winter (December-January).

Black, or Himalayan bear inferior to the brown bear in size. He has black shiny thick fur and only on the chest and at the end of the lower jaw are white spots. The black bear feeds mainly on acorns, nuts, and berries. Excellent tree climber and lies on hibernation in the hollows of the trees.

sika deer , young non-ossified horns of which - antlers - are successfully used in medicine, feed on herbs, grape leaves, lespedezia in summer, switch to tree food in winter. red deer - large deer from the group of marals, whose antlers are also highly valued. From their Siberian relatives (marals)differ in somewhat smaller sizes and a more simplified structure of the horns in males. Hornsdiscarded annually. Young antlers, like the antlers of the spotted deer, are used to prepare the medical preparation pantocrine.

East Asian boar - large, up to 300 kg in weight, the most important game animal. It lives in the valleys of mountain rivers, where it feeds on roots and ground parts of grasses in summer. In autumn, it migrates to oak forests, if there is a supply of acorns. In winter, it switches to eating pine nuts.

Goral or Amur chamois - a relic animal that lives in the mountains on steep rocky cliffs and rocks with areas of broad-leaved forest.

Shokiya exceptional

The number is very low. It occurs in the mountain cedar-broad-leaved forests of the southern and middle parts of the ridge. Sikhote-Alin at an altitude of 600-800 m, sometimes up to 1000 m above sea level. Butterflies are more often confined to the upper reaches of mountain springs. Summer occurs from late July to early September. Butterflies are sedentary, but make daily migrations: in the morning they stay in the crowns of trees, and later, they fly down. The caterpillars feed on the needles of the Korean cedar (Pinups koraiensis). The female lays eggs one by one per needle on cedars of different ages not higher than the middle part of the crown. Caterpillars come out 10-11 days after laying eggs, active in the evening and at night. Caterpillars hibernate on branches of cedar. From the beginning of April to the beginning - the middle of June, they finish their development and pupate. The pupa develops within 19 days. It is recommended that the species be included in the lists of specially protected natural monuments of the Ussuriysky Reserve and a widespread ban on catching butterflies.

Mongolian Sericin

Lives in the south of Primorsky Krai. The number is very low. It occurs mainly in riverine biotopes, usually on the slopes of river terraces in places of growth of the herbaceous twisted kirkazon (Aristolochia contorta), a fodder plant for caterpillars. Butterflies give two generations during the season and fly from mid-May to late August. The first generation is small. Slow flying sericite males are quite common in the areas where the kirkazon grows. The females lay their eggs in groups on the underside of the kirkazon leaves. Caterpillars meet in June, at the end of August - September.
It is recommended to ban economic use and insecticide treatment of the slopes of riverine terraces in the habitats of sericin, as well as to introduce a complete ban on trapping butterflies and collecting caterpillars,

Alkina

It lives in the southwest of Primorye. Not known in other union republics. The number is very low. It occurs in mountain black-fir-broad-leaved forests of the southern type, in those areas along rivers and streams where the fodder plant of caterpillars grows - a woody liana - Manchurian kirkazon. Butterflies give two generations, fly from late May to August. Representatives of the second generation are smaller. Butterflies fly slowly, and females often sit in the grass. Males willingly visit the flowers of kirkazon and spend most of their time in the crowns of trees, where the liana blooms profusely. The females lay their eggs on the leaves of the kirkazon. Outside of Russia, caterpillars, in addition to kirkazon, are found on the Colombo plant.

mother-of-pearl zenobia

Lives in the south of Primorsky Krai. The number is very low. Occurs on rocks and stony outcrops in mixed and broad-leaved forests up to 600-700 m above sea level.

Butterflies fly from mid-July to early September, which coincides with the flowering of the snakehead multicolor, on the flowers of which they usually feed. Males expel other species of mother-of-pearl from their territory. fodder plant caterpillars - motley violet - a narrow-local view. Females lay eggs one at a time, less often two or three on a host plant or next to it. After 13-15 days, caterpillars emerge from the eggs, which usually sit on the lower surface of the leaves and on the petioles. In mid-October and early November, the caterpillars leave for the winter and wake up in early April. Pupation takes place in mid-June.

Pigeon scarecrow.

Lives in the south of Primorye. The number is very low. Not studied. The species probably forms a few local populations. Known finds come from the valley deciduous forests. Currently not protected.

It is recommended to study the biology of the species in order to identify factors limiting its abundance and distribution. It is advisable to include the species in the lists of specially protected natural objects of the Kedrovaya Pad Reserve and introduce a complete ban on trapping.

Far Eastern skink.

It is found in some areas of Primorsky and Khabarovsk Territories. The Far Eastern skink on Kunashir Island is confined to oak groves, the outskirts of coniferous forests, and sandy slopes with sparse vegetation. On the mainland, it is found among the rocks along the seashore. It feeds on spiders, centipedes, and insects.

Ussuri clawed newt.

It lives in the south of Khabarovsk and in the Primorsky Territory. Inhabits clean mountain streams with pebbly or overhanging banks, usually heavily taiga forest. It lives in water or under mossy rocks near the water. Active at night. Reproduction stretches from late April to August. Females lay paired egg marks with 5-7 eggs in each larva and appear in early July. Puberty occurs in the third or fourth year. Preservation habitat, the prohibition of catching animals was recently adopted for protection.

Dikusha.

Lives in the south of Primorsky Krai. Growing grouse are characterized by significant seasonal vertical movements: in summer the birds rise to the mountains up to the belt of Siberian cedars, and in winter they gather along the ravines overgrown with dark coniferous taiga. The total number is unknown. The attachment of wild grouse to local areas of the dark coniferous taiga makes it severely dependent on their condition. The impossibility of existence outside the spruce-fir plantations, in the event of their cutting down or burning out, leads to the complete disappearance of the bird. Breeding success of the species is influenced by various factors, especially cold rainy days during the period of nesting and hatching of chicks. Among the limiting factors, one should also include the conspicuous "gullibility" of wild grouse - the ability to hide very tightly on open branches. This is a feature of behavior that allows you to get close to the bird. in modern conditions leads to the complete destruction of undeveloped territories. Within the range of wild grouse there are five reserves. Shooting it is prohibited everywhere. However, it should be noted that the measures taken do not allow to stabilize the population of the species. To confirm the number of wild grouse at an optimal level, it is necessary to preserve its habitats. The areas where this bird still remains should be taken under strict protection.

scaly merganser

It occurs along almost all rivers flowing from both slopes of the Sikhote-Alin. On the eastern slope, it is known in the basin of the Kievka, Avvakumovka, Kema, and Samarga rivers. On the western slope it nests along the river, the big Ussurka is common on the Bikin river. At present, the abundance of the species is unknown, but over the past 15-20 years it has noticeably decreased, at least in the Sikhote-Alin rivers. The appearance of motor boats has increased poaching, as they can quickly overtake the fleeing brood, which was previously easily hidden from rowing boats. It is very important to clear the valley forests rich in hollow trees where they are cut down and the banks become open. Scaled mergansers stop nesting. The hunting of merganser is prohibited, but this ban is not effective enough, because hunters do not distinguish between scaly merganser and large merganser badly. Therefore, on the nesting sites of the first species, shooting of both species should be prohibited. Nesting populations of the scaly merganser are protected in the Sikhote-Alin Reserve.

White-breasted or Himalayan bear.

Inhabits Primorsky Krai and southern regions of Khabarovsk Krai. The northern border of the range of the white-breasted bear begins on the coast of the Japanese sea, goes to the south-west, crosses the Sikhote-Alin at the headwaters of the Samarga River. Further, the boundary goes north through the middle course of the chorus. In the Sikhote-Alin in summer, the bear is found in all plant associations. Places of winter location of bears can be outlined by isohypse: 200-800 meters above sea level. Wintering areas are concentrated in areas whose centers are massive watersheds. The white-breasted bear is very sensitive to the consequences of human activities and hunting. And that put him in a difficult position right now. Clearing of primary forests, especially cedar-broad-leaved forests, and forest fires deprive white-breasted bears of their main habitats. Since 1975, licensed hunting for the white-breasted bear has been introduced in the Primorsky Territory.

Amur forest cat

The range of the species includes most of Primorsky Krai. The Amur forest cat is more common in rarefied broad-leaved forests, less often in cedar-broad-leaved forests, preferring deaf pads in bushy river valleys. Avoids dark coniferous taiga. Systematic observations of the abundance of the Amur forest cat over large areas have not been carried out. Amur cat is not adapted to life in snowy areas, primarily because of the inability to give the main food in these conditions - mouse-like rodents. AT last years the reduction of areas of natural habitats is intensifying due to the cutting down of shrubs, plowing of virgin lands with tall grass and burning bells. To save the Amur forest cat, in addition to a complete ban on fishing and the fight against accidental capture, extensive explanatory work is needed among the population, and especially among hunters, about the significance of this predator as an exterminator of harmful rodents.

In Primorye, there are 82 species of land mammals belonging to six orders. A distinctive feature of the richest fauna of the region is the presence of a large number of endemic species, some of which are endangered and listed in the Red Books of various levels, and some are simply rare and require special protection measures.

Insectivorous

Representatives of the order of insectivores belong to very ancient animals that have retained a number of primitive features. A close relative of the European mole is the Ussuri moger living in Primorye *. Individuals of the so-called “Far Eastern, or Japanese, mole” are much larger and reach a mass of 300 g. In the very south of the region - in the Khasansky district - there is another species of mohera - Japanese, which is listed in the Red Book of Russia.
An endemic species is the Amur hedgehog, which practically does not differ from the European species and has a lighter color, which is associated with the presence of unpigmented needles. Of the nine species of shrews, the most interesting is a very rare species listed in the Red Books of the IUCN and Russia - giant shrew, which fully justifies its name: its mass reaches 15 g. This animal is so rare that not a single adult male has yet been caught, and not many zoological museums in the world can boast of having at least one copy of this shrew.

Bats

bats, or the bats, are represented in Primorsky Krai by 15 species - of which the long-toed, long-tailed and Ikonnikova bats, leather-like and eastern bats and eastern leather bats are very few in number, and there is a clearly pronounced trend towards a further reduction in the number of these species and subspecies. The reason for this is the destruction of animals in natural underground cavities - karst caves and the reduction of places used for brood colonies - buildings of the old building, since the roofs of the houses of new buildings are completely unsuitable for the formations of colonial clusters.
The most ancient group of bats, which is currently dying out, are tube-noses, rare places finds of which are scattered over the vast territory of South and Central Asia. Only in the south of Primorye does a representative of this group live - the Ussuri small tube-bearer *. In the south of the Khasansky district, there is the only colony in Russia of the long-winged longwing, listed in the Red Book of Russia. Unfortunately, this colony, numbering up to 1000 individuals, was located in fortifications on the border with China, and there is evidence that it was destroyed in connection with the recently completed demarcation of the Russian-Chinese border. The most numerous wintering species is the brown earflap.

rodents

The most numerous animals in the region, as practically and everywhere, are rodents, represented by the most various kinds from a jerboa-like long-tailed mouse to a typical underground inhabitant of the zokor.
The decoration of the forests is the Manchurian squirrel *, which is a special large subspecies of the common squirrel. Short black hair, characteristic of squirrels in summer, by October is replaced by winter dark gray. An interesting feature of the ecology of the squirrel is the phenomenon of mass migrations: in years of lack of food, animals begin to undertake grandiose transitions to productive places. At this time, they can be seen in the most inappropriate habitats for them - among fields, mowing, in villages, on rocks moving in a certain direction.
In appearance, it somewhat resembles a flying squirrel, the most characteristic feature of which is a fold of skin covered with hair, stretched in the form of a membrane along the sides of the body between the front and hind legs. This animal rarely jumps through the trees like a squirrel, but more often, having climbed the trunk to the top, it rushes down, spreading its limbs to the side. At the same time, the straightened membrane serves as a kind of glider wings or a parachute for it. During a gliding descent, the flying squirrel can make quick and sharp turns, and in a straight line, descending, fly up to 100 m.
An even more common rodent is the chipmunk*. In winter, he sleeps, lying in holes in October - November and wakes up only in March. In years of high numbers and lack of food, chipmunks appear in gardens and vegetable gardens, causing serious damage to local residents.
Of the small rodents, the red and red-gray voles, the East Asian mouse and the mouse live in various types of forests, and in the open spaces of the region the Far Eastern vole, field mouse, two types of hamsters - Daurian and rat-like. The smallest mouse in Primorsky Krai, whose weight does not exceed 15 g, is a baby mouse *, which, unlike all other rodents, does not dig holes, but builds spherical nests, often suspended in dense grass or on shrub branches.
Of the hares, two species live in Primorye - hare and Manchurian. The Manchurian hare looks like a rabbit: it has a wide head and shortened, in comparison with other hares, ears and hind legs. Unlike their relatives, these hares do not confuse their tracks at all, do not make estimates, but try to evade pursuit “directly”, maneuvering among the dense thickets of undergrowth. And this hare has a lot of enemies - it is literally caught by all predatory animals ranging in size from a column to a leopard, even a small weasel is capable of biting a week-old hare. This species keeps mainly in dry areas of river valleys and at the foot of mountains, where dense undergrowth grows.

Artiodactyl animals of Primorsky Krai

Seven species of wild artiodactyl animals live in Primorsky Krai: red deer (red deer), Amur goral, wild spotted deer, musk deer, roe deer, elk and wild boar.
One of the rarest ungulates in Russia - goral * - is found in the Sikhote-Alin mountains. This species is endangered and has survived only in the most inaccessible parts of the ridge. Favorite habitats are steep rocky cliffs descending directly to the sea. Goral jumps with amazing ease along steep steeps, making swift jerks and jumping up to two meters. Gorals are not adapted to a long run and try not to move away from the saving rocks. Currently, the total number of these animals is estimated at 500-700 individuals, of which only 200 gorals live outside the protected areas. Hunting and trapping of the goral has been prohibited since 1924, the species is listed in the Red Books of the IUCN and Russia.
Another endemic species of ungulates listed in the Red Book of Russia is the Ussuri spotted deer*. The summer coloring of these animals is very beautiful - numerous white spots are scattered over a bright orange background. No wonder the Chinese call this deer “hua-lu”, which means “deer-flower”. It is believed that in Primorye there are two ecological forms of this narrow-range subspecies - wild and park. It is wild deer populations that are protected by law. At present, aboriginal populations have survived only in the Lazovsky and Olginsky districts, mainly in the Lazovsky Reserve and the territory adjacent to it. Deer, unlike bovids (bulls, goats and rams), change their antlers every year. In the first stages of growth, deer antlers are soft, covered with delicate skin with hair; only by autumn do they become hard and ossify. Horns before ossification are called antlers and are widely used for the preparation of the drug pantocrine. It was this fact that served as one of the reasons for the extermination of spotted deer at the beginning of the century.
The original small deer musk deer* weighs only up to 10 kg. Unlike other sika deer and red deer, male musk deer are hornless, but they have sharp fangs 6-8 cm long in the upper jaw. The hind legs of the musk deer are much longer than the front ones, which allows it to easily jump up to 7 m. With a calm step, it walks “hunched over”, and if necessary to get its usual winter food (lichens) from the trees, it stands on its hind legs, resting its front legs against the trunk. In males, a peculiar gland is located on the belly, the so-called “musk jet”, which is a bag the size of egg, filled with a porridge-like brown mass with the smell of sulfuric ether - musk, which is widely used, for example, in perfumery to fix perfume smells.
Speaking about the ungulates of Primorye, one cannot fail to mention the Ussuri subspecies of the wild boar *, which differs well from the other four subspecies in its large body size. Outwardly, the wild boar bears little resemblance to the domestic pig. This is a massive animal on strong legs, with a strongly developed front girdle, a very thick and short neck and a powerful head, which makes up about a third of the entire body length. There are still old male billhooks weighing up to 300 kg, although the average weight of wild boars, taking into account young ones, is much less, about 70 kg. From the end of November, the rut begins in wild boars, accompanied by fierce fights among males. And young piglets are born at the end of March - April, when there is still snow. The piglets, having left the specially built “gaino” nest, already from the fifth day on their own look for food under the protection of their mother, who continues to walk with them until spring. next year.

Predators of Primorsky Krai

Representatives of the predatory order are widely represented in the region. The cat family, for example, includes four species: tiger, leopard, lynx, and wild cat. There is no need to describe the appearance and ecological features of the largest cat in the Ussuri forests - the tiger, which has become a kind of symbol of the Primorsky Territory. More importantly, this unique cat is endangered.
A rare subspecies of the tiger lives in Primorye, the number of which has stabilized at a low level. Over the past century, the population of the Amur tiger* has experienced profound and dramatic changes: from a relatively high population at the beginning of the century to a deep decline in the late 1930s and early 1940s, when about 20-30 animals remained in the entire range within the country, then a turning point. to a gradual increase until 1990, when the number of tigers may have reached the level of 300 - 350 individuals. The main factor that brought the tiger to the brink of extinction was the direct persecution of it by man, and the turning point in its fate was the introduction in Russia since 1947 of the legislative protection of the tiger. Although there is no immediate threat of extinction for this subspecies, its future continues to be of great concern. In most regions of the region, there is a clear imbalance in the population density of the main species of potential prey of the predator and the predator itself. The most important negative factor was the intensified poaching, which has acquired since the beginning of the 90s. commercial nature (skins, bones and other parts of dead tigers are sold in most countries of East Asia as valuable medicinal raw materials). At present, a detailed “Strategy for the Conservation of the Amur Tiger in Russia” has been adopted and comprehensive efforts are being made to normalize the situation with this rare and beautiful predator.;
Another endangered predator is the Far Eastern, or Amur, leopard*, which is the northernmost of all leopard subspecies. Its population is considered genetically isolated and requires the adoption of measures to preserve it as a genetically unique component in the system of species diversity of both the region and the world as a whole. Currently, there are no more than 50 leopards in the region, and scientists are making every effort to save this animal from extinction. The weight of the leopard does not exceed 80 kg. His winter fur is thick, with bright colors: black or black-brown solid or rosette spots are scattered over an ocher-red background. The leopard walks and jumps completely without noise, and the bright colors perfectly mask it in any season, so it is very rare to see this slender cat with soft smooth movements.
Common, but not numerous in the forests of Primorye, wild forest cat, the smallest representative of the feline in the Far East. Individuals of a wild cat are much larger than domestic cats, old males weigh up to 10 kg. Feeds on rodents, hazel grouse, pheasants, crushes young roes. The way of life is hidden, nocturnal, and spends the day in hollows, rocks, in thickets of bushes.
Of the bears, two species live here. The brown bear, the largest bear in Europe and Asia, is widely distributed throughout the Ussuri region, although the main part of the species habitat is confined to the central part of Sikhote-Alin. Most of the time this animal spends in search of food, feeding mainly on plant foods. As is known, brown bears hibernate, using dens for wintering, located under the eversion of a tree or in a windbreak in coniferous forests, mainly in deaf, deep-snow areas of the mountains. Insufficiently well-fed for normal winter sleep, bears do not hibernate. These are the so-called “rods”, which have a habit of wandering around the taiga all winter in search of any food, up to the remnants of wolf “meals”. They attack ungulates and are dangerous for humans when they meet.
The Himalayan bear, which is popularly called either white-breasted or black, is distributed only in the southern part of the Far East, living in deciduous forests. They are markedly different from brown bears. Their fur is silky, black with a white spot on the chest in the form of a flying bird. Large males of 200 kg are rare, and females usually weigh no more than 100 kg. Himalayan bears spend about 15% of their lives among the crowns of trees, eating berries, acorns and nuts. For the winter, they lay down in mid-November, before the snow. Lairs are arranged in hollows of soft tree species- poplars or lindens. In the same place, females in February will give birth to two, less often three blind cubs, only 500 grams in weight. The species is included in the Red Book of Russia. However, at present, the process of reducing the number of this species has been stopped and the number of bears in Primorye has increased markedly.
From the canine family, the raccoon dog, the wolf and the fox are found in Primorsky Krai. Another representative of this family, the red wolf, is listed in the Red Books of the IUCN and Russia. As early as the beginning of the 20th century, packs of red wolves regularly appeared throughout their range in Russia, but since the 1930s, each case of meeting this animal has become an exceptional rarity. The disappearance of this species in the coastal region was a catastrophic reduction in its numbers in the adjacent territory of China, from where, apparently, its races to the territory of Russia took place. The red wolf at present cannot be considered a permanent species of the fauna of Primorye until its reproduction in this territory is proved.
Predators of medium and small sizes with relatively short legs and with a few exceptions (badger, wolverine) with a highly elongated flexible body are representatives of the weasel family. In Primorsky Krai, this family is represented by 10 species. Badger, wolverine, sable, harza, weasel, ermine, solongoy, weasel, American mink and otter live here.

GOU VPO Pacific State Economic University (UF)

ANIMAL WORLD OF PRIMORSKY REGION

Ussuriysk 2010

1. Introduction

2) Species diversity

3) general characteristics biodiversity

– Birds of Primorsky Krai

Bird migrations through the territory of Primorye

- Representatives of the order of insectivores

- Bats or bats

– Rodents

– Wild artiodactyl animals

- Representatives of the predatory squad

– Study of land mammals

a) Animal salt licks as a phenomenon and indicator. Adaptations of animals to the conditions of the mountain taiga Sikhote-Alin

4) Problems of wildlife protection

5) Conclusion

6) References

INTRODUCTION

In Primorye, there are 82 species of land mammals belonging to six orders. A distinctive feature of the richest fauna of the region is the presence of a large number of endemic species, some of which are endangered and listed in the Red Books of various levels, and some are simply rare and require special protection measures.

The fauna of Primorsky Krai is distinguished by a unique combination of northern and southern species. The fauna of the cedar-deciduous forests is the richest and most peculiar. Typical mammals that give color to the Ussuri forests are predators: the Amur tiger, the Amur leopard, the Amur forest cat, the Himalayan bear; ungulates: sika deer, red deer. Often there are wolverine, wild boar, lynx, sable, otter, as well as shrews and rodents.

There are 360 ​​species of birds in Primorye. Among them are many endemic species of the Chinese-Himalayan type of fauna or those of a tropical appearance and wintering in the Philippines and the Sunda Islands, in India and Indochina. In the forests of Primorye, insectivores are most common: the tropical appearance of the flycatcher, chinese oriole, poison dart frogs: woodpeckers and nuthatches; herbivorous: Yankovsky's oatmeal, black-headed grosbeak; chicken: hazel grouse, pheasant. In river valleys and lakes live scaly merganser and colorfully colored mandarin duck. Rare are the Far Eastern stork, spoonbill, sukhonos, white-naped crane.

In the reservoirs of the region there are up to 100 species of fish: crucian carp, Amur pike, skygazer, snakehead, chebak, grayling, redfin, taimen. Pink salmon, chum salmon, and sim go into the rivers from the Sea of ​​Japan to spawn.

SPECIES DIVERSITY

Birds

Insectivores

Bats or bats

rodents

wild artiodactyl animals

Predators

red-bellied woodpecker

Ussuri Mohera

Pipe-noses

long-tailed mouse

Fish owl

Amur hedgehog

brown earflaps

Amur goral

tangerine

Manchurian squirrel

wild sika deer

black crane

Manchurian hare

Wild cat

red-legged ibis

Far Eastern vole

Brown bear

Far Eastern stork

Dahurian hamster

Himalayan bear

crested shelduck

scaly merganser

Little mouse

Japanese crane

GENERAL PROFILE OF BIODIVERSITY

BIRDS OF PRIMORYE

red-bellied woodpecker

Among the birds of the Ussuri Territory there is a mysterious red-bellied woodpecker - the status of which is still not clear, and not only in Russia, but throughout its nesting range, which includes some part (which one - there is no consensus among Chinese ornithologists) of the province Heilongjiang in China.
Of our woodpeckers, it is the only truly migratory one; D. hyperythrus subrufinus wintering grounds are located in the extreme southeast of China and in North Vietnam and are adjacent to the ranges of its three southern subspecies.
Its close relationship with the birds of the tropics is evidenced by its bright coloration and some details of behavior. The woodpecker has a bright red chest and belly and a white ring around the eye against the background of the red plumage of the sides of the head, otherwise the color of the plumage resembles that of other motley woodpeckers of the genus Dendrocopos. Unfortunately, we have not yet been able to photograph birds in nature. These woodpeckers often fly high above the forest canopy and almost always call in flight. The cry of the red-bellied woodpecker is a long modulating trill that intensifies in vibration. The drum roll, on the contrary, is very short, the shortest of all other woodpeckers of the genus Dendrocopos, but quite sonorous and audible from a distance of more than 100 m.
The red-bellied woodpecker was introduced into the fauna of Russia in 1966 by G.Sh.Lafer and Yu.N.Nazarov, when several birds of passage were found on the islands of Peter the Great Bay. In the 70s, meetings of the species in the extreme south of Primorye became regular, but all attempts to find it here for nesting have not yet been successful.
A complete surprise was the discovery of the first nesting site of the red-bellied woodpecker in Russia almost 20 years after the first meeting. In 1985, it was discovered by O.P. Valchuk much to the north, 60 km northeast of Khabarovsk. Since that time, the red-bellied woodpecker has been recorded here almost every year, and the geography of spring meetings of the species in Primorye and in the northeast of Heilongjiang province is also expanding. And, finally, in 1997, A.A. Nazarenko managed to find a new, second in Russia and first in Primorye, nesting place for the species - on the Strelnikov Ridge in the Ussuri River basin.
As in northeastern China, in the Russian Far East, the red-bellied woodpecker lives in secondary mixed-broad-leaved forests of low mountains and foothills with a predominance of oak and a large share of aspen in the forest stand. Probably, the species develops secondary clarified forests not immediately after logging, but when aspen stands reach maturity. It was not discovered on the territory of the Ussuri region until 1966, although many experienced researchers and collectors worked here, starting with N.M. Przhevalsky. Most likely, the red-bellied woodpecker appeared in the Far East of Russia from northeastern China in the 60s, when the existing secondary forests formed everywhere in the border zone in the basins of the Ussuri and Amur rivers. The process of dispersal (or resettlement) of the species apparently continues, because in China, due to the increasing anthropogenic pressure, the area of ​​suitable habitats is steadily decreasing, while in Russia, on the contrary, it is increasing. We believe that the next nesting site for the red-bellied woodpecker in Russia may be the Lesser Khingan Range in the Jewish Autonomous Region, covered with similar forests.
The biology of the red-bellied woodpecker is still poorly understood, but it does not fundamentally differ from the biology of other woodpeckers, with the exception of details determined by the migratory nature of the species.
At the working meeting of the coordinating committee of Bird Life Internetionel on the project of the Red Book of Birds of Asia /Khabarovsk, 1996/ it was decided to include the species in the lists of candidates for inclusion in this book. Currently, it is included in the new edition of the Red Book of Russia as a small, sporadically distributed and poorly studied species /Valchuk, in press/. Perhaps, as a special measure for the protection of the species, it is advisable to create a reserve in the first nesting area. Collection of material on the biology of the species and study state of the art its population in the south of the Russian Far East continues.

Fish owl

An even rarer fish owl is found in the Ussuri region. It is also found on the coast of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk, in Primorye, on Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands. We can say that this is the most unusual owl of our country. Firstly, the fish owl is a longtime representative of the Red Book. Secondly, unlike other owls, it feeds almost exclusively on fish.

In size, this owl is almost as good as an ordinary owl, its coloration is low-contrast, monotonous, and besides, its toes are bare, without plumage.

The fish owl spends almost all the time on one part of the river floodplain, overgrown with high elms and poplars. Not every place suits him - birds choose rivers rich in fish, as well as those that do not completely freeze in winter or have polynyas. There eagle owls feed in the harsh season. They sit by the open water on the shore and guard their prey. At some polynyas and gullies five or six birds can gather.

In summer, fish owls usually look out for fish from a coastal stone, from a high section of the coast, or from a tree trunk tilted above the water. As soon as the predator notices the fish, it immediately breaks off from the observation post and on the fly grabs the lenok or grayling that has risen to the surface of the water. At night, he wanders along the shallow rifts and snatches the fish swimming by. To keep slippery prey, the eagle owl uses strong paws armed with very sharp hook-shaped claws. The inner surface of the paws is covered with small spines. Sometimes the fish owl changes its hunting grounds, moving from one section of the river to another. I happened to see whole paths that these birds trampled as they wandered along the coast.

The fish owl is notable for its fidelity, which is unusual for trueness - pairs in this species apparently last for several years. In February, when snow is everywhere in Primorye, the mating season begins for owls, and the valley forests resound with the spring cries of these birds. Birds do not interfere with "singing" to each other: their voices sound at strictly defined intervals. Usually the male starts, but after his first syllable, the female, as it were, inserts her “song” into the “song” of the male, and both birds “sing” in a duet. Unlike the common owl, the fish never "laughs". Fish owls often “sing” at the nest, sitting on one branch. Their duet is carried far in the morning or evening dawn - it is heard at a distance of up to one and a half kilometers from the current couple.

At the nest, adult birds often call to each other with a whistle.

Fish owls build nests in hollows at a height of 6 to 18 m. Usually there are two, less often three chicks in the nest. After two months, they leave the hollow, but stay nearby while they learn to fly. However, for a long time, until autumn, adult birds continue to feed the young. It happens that the next year, already almost adult young eagle owls fly to the new nest of their parents and demand food from them with a demanding whistle.

The number of this rare species of owls today is steadily declining. The economic development of floodplain territories, cutting down old hollow trees, accidental death in traps, the development of water tourism, river pollution and the depletion of fish stocks - all this reduces the number of these unusual birds.

mandarin duck
The mandarin duck is the most beautiful duck on earth. Of course, we are talking about the drake. The duck is also elegant and graceful, but painted modestly. It is understandable: she should not attract the attention of predators, since all worries about offspring are on her shoulders.

This is a small duck, also called a Japanese duck and a hollow duck. The average weight of a drake is about 620, and a duck is about 500 grams.

The flight of the mandarin is fast and very maneuverable: from the ground and from the water they rise freely, almost vertically.

Usually a mandarin duck is a very silent duck, it squeaks, whistles, but in the spring, during breeding, it continuously quacks, and its melodious voice differs significantly from the voices of other ducks.

Tangerines arrange nests, usually in hollows. A significant part of the diet is acorns. The nest usually contains 6-7 often 8-10 eggs. The female incubates them for 28-30 days.

A rare species, the number of which tends to decrease. It lives along the Amur, in the Sikhote-Alin mountain system, the Ussuri Valley and Southern Primorye. The species breeds in the south of Sakhalin and on about. Kunashir.

The mandarin winters in Japan and in southern China.
The mandarin duck has no commercial value. In China and Japan, it has been domesticated and bred as an ornamental bird.
The main breeding area of ​​the mandarin duck is located on Japanese islands and on the island of Taiwan.
Tangerines arrive in Primorye early, when there is still snow in places, and the first gullies are just appearing on the rivers. They arrive in pairs and flocks and immediately begin their mating courtship; sometimes up to three males take care of one female. You can’t do without fights, but these fights are more like a ritual of competition.

Tangerines arrive when Far Eastern frogs spring concerts and the spawning period begin. Frogs, like acorns, are a favorite delicacy of tangerines. Of course, there are also a lot of "dishes" from plant seeds, fish, salamanders, etc. is included in the diet of these ducks, but the first two are the main ones. To eat acorns, tangerines sit on oaks, collect them on the slopes of hills or in the water.

Tangerines nest in hollows of trees, sometimes at a height of up to 20 meters, and one has to wonder how the chicks, falling from such a height, do not break. And then all sorts of predators appear, crows.

All summer the female tangerine spends on raising offspring. Males, in June, shed their nuptial attire and become almost indistinguishable from females. Tangerines live along deaf taiga rivers, along channels littered with windbreak, oxbow lakes, and therefore they are still preserved in sufficient numbers. And although they are listed in the Red Book of Russia, they are not yet threatened with extinction. It is difficult to imagine the Far Eastern rivers without beautiful mandarins. In America, her close relative lives - the Carolina duck, but in beauty it is noticeably inferior to the mandarin duck, and there are almost no forests there like ours. Both species belong to wood ducks and are found in treeless places only during migration.

In autumn, tangerines fly south late. Some males that linger until November have time to “dress” again in their mating attire...

black crane(lat. Grus monacha) - a bird of the crane family, nesting mainly in the territory Russian Federation. Long time was considered an unexplored species, the first nest was discovered by the Russian ornithologist Yu. B. Pukinsky only in 1974. It is listed in the International Red Book as an endangered species. The total number of black cranes is estimated by ornithologists at 9400-9600 individuals.

One of the smallest species of cranes, its height is about 100 cm and its weight is 3.75 kg. The plumage of most of the body is bluish-gray. The flight feathers of the first and second orders of the wings, as well as the covert feathers of the tail, are black. The head and most of the neck are white. There are almost no feathers on the crown, with the exception of many black setae; the skin in this place in adult birds is bright red. The beak is greenish, slightly pinkish at the base and yellow-green at the top. Legs blackish-brown. Sexual dimorphism (visible differences between male and female) is not pronounced, although males appear somewhat larger. In young birds in the first year of life, the crown is covered with black and white feathers, and the plumage of the body has a reddish tint.

During the breeding season, the black-crowned crane feeds and nests in hard-to-reach areas of raised sphagnum bogs of the taiga with oppressed woody vegetation, mainly consisting of larch or rare shrubs. Avoids both large open spaces and dense vegetation. In areas of winter migration, it stops near rice or grain fields and in wetlands, where they huddle in large flocks, often together with the Common Cranes and White-naped Cranes.

The diet does not differ from the diet of the common crane and includes both plant and animal food. Feeds on parts aquatic plants, berries, grains, insects, frogs, salamanders and other small animals. In a Japanese nursery, it is fed with seeds of rice, corn, wheat and other grains.

A pair of black-crowned cranes mark their connection with a joint characteristic singing, which is usually produced with the head thrown back and the beak raised vertically upwards and is a series of complex lingering melodic sounds. In this case, the male always spreads his wings, and the female keeps them folded. The male starts to call first, and the female responds with two calls to each of his calls. Courtship is accompanied by characteristic crane dances, which may include hopping, dashing, flapping wings, tossing tufts of grass, and bending over. Although dancing is most associated with mating season, ornithologists believe that they are a common manifestation of the behavior of cranes and can play the role of a calming factor in aggression, relieving tension or strengthening the marital bond.

The place for the nest is chosen in hard-to-reach places in the midst of mossy swamps of the middle and southern taiga with sparse oppressed vegetation. Pieces of wet moss, peat, stems and leaves of sedge, twigs of larch and birch are used as material for the nest. Egg laying occurs in late April-early May, the female usually lays two eggs averaging 9.34x5.84 cm in size and weighing 159.4 g (according to other sources, the egg size is 10.24x6.16 cm). The incubation period is 27-30 days, both parents participate in incubation. The chicks fledge after about 75 days.

CURRENT STATUS OF SOME RED BOOK BIRD SPECIES

red-legged ibis

In the XIX century nested in Primorye (Przhevalsky, 1870). After 1917, it was no longer met for nesting in Russia. N.M. Przhevalsky (1870) counted two or three dozen birds during the spring migration and no more than 20 during the breeding season. Over the past 60 years, single birds have been encountered in Primorye three times (Spangenberg, 1965; Labzyuk, 1981, 1985). In the 80s of the twentieth century. on the territory of Primorye, a special search for the red-legged ibis was undertaken. The questionnaires were prepared by the Wild Bird Society of Japan. Searches did not give positive results. The local population is considered extinct.

Far Eastern stork

A significant part of the population of the species lives in Primorye. The main nesting area is the Ussuri-Khanka lowland. In 1974-75. about 140 pairs nested in Primorye. During these years, one family of storks accounted for an average of 1.6 chicks (Shibaev et al., 1976; Shibaev, 1989). In recent decades, the number of this bird has been declining. Unlike the white stork (Ciconia ciconia), the Far Eastern stork (Ciconia boyciana) gravitates towards humans to a lesser extent. Although it lives mainly in the anthropogenic landscape, almost no nests are found in settlements.

crested shelduck

A species whose existence was known from old Chinese and Japanese drawings, as well as from several museum specimens. The crested shelduck was thought to have disappeared. However, bird sightings in 1964 in Southern Primorye (Labzyuk, 1972) and in 1971 in North Korea(Sok, 1984) give hope that birds are still preserved in nature. However, a questionnaire survey conducted in the early 1980s in East Asia, including Primorye, did not give positive results (Nowak, 1983).

scaly merganser

More than 90% of the world population of this duck nests (breeds) in the Russian Far East. (Only a very small number also nests in NW China.) In Primorye, the scaly-sided Merganser is found on many mountain rivers in the Sikhote-Alin Range. The state of the population does not inspire much concern.

Japanese crane

The nests of the Japanese crane in Primorye are associated with the Khanka lowland, as well as with the lower reaches of large tributaries of the river. Ussuri. The maximum number of birds was counted in 1980 (116 specimens) and in 1986 (123 specimens). Successfully nesting pairs (families) amounted to 18-19 and 20, respectively. Habitats (nesting biotope) - extensive grass swamps with reeds in combination with lakes and small rivers. Birds from Lake Khanka fly to the Korean Peninsula for the winter. The state of the population is quite stable.

Reed sutor

This bird with an extravagant appearance was discovered in Primorye in the late 60s of the XX century. The main area of ​​its nesting is the Khanka lowland. According to 1977/79 estimates. no more than 400 nesting pairs lived there. Nesting biotope of the reed sutor - thickets of reeds. In the same thickets, birds spend the winter feeding on insects hibernating in reed stalks. This extreme specialization makes the species very vulnerable. Especially dangerous for the species are grass fires that regularly occur in the Khanka lowland. In the Chinese part of the range, commercial cane harvesting is practiced.
The creation in 1990 of the Khankai Reserve somewhat reduced the severity of the threat to the existence of the species. However, it did not completely remove the threat. It is necessary to expand the territory of the reserve and fight fires.
In recent years, the reed sutora has been found in small numbers in other areas of Primorye.

BIRD MIGRATION THROUGH THE TERRITORY OF PRIMORYE

The confinement of the Primorsky Territory to the middle latitudes and to the area of ​​contact between the Asian land and the Pacific Ocean, as well as the fact that the valley of the region's largest river - the river. Ussuri and the territories of the wetlands of the lake. Khanka and the lake plain of the river. Fogs cross the region in the meridional direction, all this leads to the fact that in spring and autumn Primorsky Krai falls into the zone of action of the great "Eastern Trans-Asian migration flow of migratory birds". Tens and hundreds of thousands of birds - waterfowl, waders, ground passerines and others - in the spring from their wintering grounds in East and Southeast Asia and Australia on their way to their nesting sites in North and Northeast Asia(and in the autumn - in the opposite direction) visit Primorye, stopping here for rest and to replenish energy resources. It is noteworthy that out of a total list of 460 species of birds noted in Primorye, more than 200 species cross the territory of Primorye during their seasonal migrations.
Two main migration flows pass through the territory of the region. One - along sea ​​coast. It is followed by most of the waders, sea gulls, loons and other "sea" birds. The other is confined to the valley of the river. Ussuri and wetlands of the Khanka lowland and the lake plain of the river. Fog. B? most part waterfowl and the vast majority of land crossing Primorye in this way. In the extreme south of the region, in the Tumangan wetlands, these streams merge.
The first description of the spring passage of birds on the lake. Khanka belongs to N.M. Przhevalsky, who made his observations here in 1868 and 1869. Subsequently, many ornithologists, professionals and amateurs, were engaged in visual observations of the passage of birds in Primorye in different years of the current century. As a result, the timing of passage for most bird species and the estimated number of migrants, primarily waterfowl, are now fairly well known. Unfortunately, in recent decades, there has been a persistent trend towards a decrease in the number of most waterfowl. Thus, the number of the kloktun population fell catastrophically.
Bird ringing, as a method of studying their migrations, has not become widespread in Primorye. In 1962-1970. on the lake Khanka under the direction of V.M. Polivanov, more than 5.5 thousand chicks of gray and red herons were ringed. Returns of rings, in the amount of 2.6 and 1.5%, respectively, made it possible to determine the areas of flight of young birds (including those far to the north) and to clarify the areas of passage and wintering of these herons. In the same years, in the colonies of seabirds in Peter the Great Bay, under the leadership of N.M. Litvinenko, more than 23,000 chicks of the black-tailed gull were ringed. This made it possible to elucidate the pattern of movement of birds of different ages and in different seasons of the year within the entire Sea of ​​Japan. In incomparably smaller numbers, some other sea ​​birds, including the Japanese cormorant, waders and some passerine birds.
In the 1980s, as part of international cooperation between International Fund conservation of cranes (USA), the Wild Bird Society of Japan and the Laboratory of Ornithology of the BPI FEB RAS for monitoring the population of the Japanese crane (see below) marked the chicks of this crane with colored rings. The project did not bring any scientific surprises.
Since the autumn of 1998, the Amur-Ussuri Center for the Study of Bird Biodiversity has started a long-term bird ringing project in Primorsky Krai. The project is carried out on the initiative and with financial support Department of Social and Environmental Environment of Toyama Prefecture, Japan and with the assistance of the Committee for the Protection and Rational Use of Natural Resources of the Primorsky Territory Administration. The main goal of the project is to create a monitoring service for the state of populations of some groups of birds, with an emphasis on passerines by trapping and marking them during migrations.

INSECTIVORE

Ussuri Mohera

The Ussuri mohera lives in broad-leaved forests (mainly preferring mountain river valleys) with loose soil. Leads an underground lifestyle. The passages of the Ussuri mohera are usually located at a depth of up to 10 cm, only in areas with dense earth it digs deeper passages with the ejection of earth to the surface and the formation of molehills. It feeds on earthworms, larvae and adult insects.

Live animals emit a characteristic garlic smell. Lives in Primorye and in the south of the Khabarovsk Territory in deciduous and mixed forests. On occasion it catches mice and shrews. It builds passages with a diameter of 7-9 cm at a depth of up to 20 cm. It does not make molehills, but soil ridges above the passages are usually noticeable. The skins are much more High Quality than other moles, but due to the limited distribution area, the moger remains a minor commercial species.

Amur hedgehog

Amur hedgehog(lat. Erinaceus amurensis) - a mammal of the genus forest hedgehogs; the closest relative of the common hedgehog. It is found in northern China, on the Korean Peninsula and in Russia - in the Primorsky Territory, in the south of the Khabarovsk Territory and in the Amur Region (in the floodplains of the Amur and Ussuri rivers).
The Amur hedgehog is very similar to the common hedgehog, but has a lighter color. Up to a third of its needles are devoid of pigment, so the overall tone of the spiny cover is light brown. The fur on the abdomen is brown, hard, bristly. On the back and back of the body needles up to 24 mm long. The length of his body is 18-26 cm, tail - 16-28 mm. Weight, depending on the season, ranges from 234 to 1092 grams.

The Amur hedgehog inhabits a wide variety of biotopes, avoiding only highlands, vast marshes and large arable areas. Optimal habitats for it are river valleys and lower parts of slopes, covered with coniferous-deciduous forest, with rich undergrowth and herbage. Prefers to settle on the border of the forest and open spaces. The day spends in the nest, but on cool rainy days it can hunt around the clock. The basis of its nutrition is earthworms and other soil invertebrates, less often small terrestrial vertebrates, and even more rarely fruits of plants. The breeding season runs from late March to early April. There are 3-8 cubs in a litter. Sexual maturity occurs at 2 years of age.

normal view for the Russian Far East.

BAT, OR BAT

Bats, or bats, are represented in Primorsky Krai by 15 species - of which the long-toed, long-tailed and Ikonnikova * bats, leather-like and oriental bats and oriental kozhan are very few in number, and there is a clearly pronounced trend towards a further reduction in the number of these species and subspecies. The reason for this is the destruction of animals in natural underground cavities - karst caves and the reduction of places used for brood colonies - buildings of the old building, since the roofs of the houses of new buildings are completely unsuitable for the formations of colonial clusters. The most ancient group of bats, which is currently dying out, are the tube-nosed bats, whose rare finds are scattered over the vast territory of South and Central Asia. Only in the south of Primorye does a representative of this group live - the Ussuri small tube-bearer *. In the south of the Khasansky district, there is the only colony in Russia of the long-winged longwing, listed in the Red Book of Russia. Unfortunately, this colony, numbering up to 1000 individuals, was located in fortifications on the border with China, and there is evidence that it was destroyed in connection with the recently completed demarcation of the Russian-Chinese border. The most numerous wintering species is the brown earflap*.

RODENTS

Belyak

Large hare: body length of adult animals from 44 to 65 cm, occasionally reaching 74 cm; body weight 1.6-4.5 kg.

The ears are long (7.5-10 cm), but noticeably shorter than those of the hare. The tail is usually all white; relatively short and rounded, 5-10.8 cm long. Paws relatively wide; the feet, including the balls of the fingers, are covered with a thick brush of hair. The load per 1 cm² of sole area of ​​the hare is only 8.5-12 g, which allows it to move easily even on loose snow. (For comparison, in a fox it is 40-43 g, in a wolf - 90-103 g, and in a hound dog - 90-110 g).

There is a pronounced seasonal dimorphism in coloration: in winter, the hare is pure white, with the exception of the black tips of the ears; the color of summer fur in different parts of the range is from reddish-gray to slate-gray with brown striation. The head is usually colored somewhat darker than the back; the sides are lighter. The belly is white. Only in areas where there is no stable snow cover, hares do not turn white for the winter. Females of hare are on average larger than males, they do not differ in color. There are 48 chromosomes in the hare karyotype.

Zokor

The Manchurian zokor (subspecies epsilanus) inhabited most of the Khanka lowland at the beginning of the last century. However, by the 1970s and 1980s, it survived only in Primorsky Krai in 3-4 small isolated areas with sparse settlements in the western part of the lowland, in the Ussuriysky, Oktyabrsky, Pogranichny and Khankaysky districts. The range of this species continues to shrink. Outside of Russia, the Manchurian zokor is common in Mongolia (in the east) and in China.

This is a relatively large zokor, the color of the fur can vary from dark gray to light, grayish buff. The upper part of the nose and forehead are lighter and greyer. The chin and circumference of the mouth are whitish. Dark-colored individuals often have a fawn-whitish spot on the back of the head. The tail is almost naked, with very sparse grayish hairs. Body weight can reach 456 g (on average - 297 g), body length is about 209 mm (minimum - 190 mm, maximum -238 mm), tail - 34-50.5 mm (average - 40.7 mm), feet - 32.7 (30–35.5). The length of the claw on the third finger is 14–18 mm.

The Manchurian zokor leads an underground lifestyle. Each animal digs its own complex two-tier system of passages; the area of ​​the hole can be judged by the volume of earth thrown to the surface in cone-shaped heaps. Feeding passages pass at a depth of 12–20 cm. The diameter of the burrows of underyearlings is 4–5 cm, that of adults is 8–12 cm. when laying passages, part of the earth is clogged into old autumn moves. When digging up the roots, the zokor constantly makes new passages in the upper tier, clogs the old ones with earth plugs. The lower tier of the burrow system is located at a depth of 40–110 cm and is connected to the system of feeding passages by several vertical burrows. The length of the passages of the lower tier is limited and undergoes little change. Here are pantries, latrines and a nesting chamber. The length of surface passages reaches 150 m. The Manchurian zokor is active all year round. During the day, peaks of activity are confined to the morning and evening twilight hours. The highest seasonal activity of this species is observed in May-early June and is explained by the resettlement of young animals. By the middle of summer, the intensity of the digging activity of the zokor decreases. In autumn (August-October), there is again a slight increase in burrowing activity, which is associated with the need to create food reserves. In winters with little snow, when the soil freezes, zokor activity is not observed in surface passages.

Manchurian squirrel

The decoration of the forests is the Manchurian squirrel, which is a special large subspecies of the common squirrel. Short black hair, characteristic of squirrels in summer, by October is replaced by winter dark gray. An interesting feature of the ecology of the squirrel is the phenomenon of mass migrations: in years of lack of food, animals begin to undertake grandiose transitions to productive places. At this time, they can be seen in the most inappropriate habitats for them - among fields, mowing, in villages, on rocks moving in a certain direction.

In appearance, it somewhat resembles a flying squirrel, the most characteristic feature of which is a fold of skin covered with hair, stretched in the form of a membrane along the sides of the body between the front and hind legs. This animal rarely jumps through the trees like a squirrel, but more often, having climbed the trunk to the top, it rushes down, spreading its limbs to the side. At the same time, the straightened membrane serves as a kind of glider wings or a parachute for it. During a gliding descent, the flying squirrel can make quick and sharp turns, and in a straight line, descending, fly up to 100 m.

Manchurian hare

The bush hare (Lepus mandshuricus) is a mammal of the hare genus of the hare order. Previously, it was often combined with the Japanese bush hare (Lepus brachiurus) or separated into a separate genus, Caprolagus.

Kind of hare. Previously often included in the Japanese bush hare (L. brachiurus) or in the genus Caprolagus. Body weight 1.3-2.3 kg, body length 430-490 mm, tail length GO-95 mm, foot length 110-130 mm, ear length 75-90 mm.

The ears are very short; the tail is relatively long, gray below, black above. The coloration of the back and top of the head is ocher-brown or ocher-gray with dark striation; whitish spots on the sides of the head, a dark stripe under the eye; the sides of the body and paws are fawn, the belly is off-white. There are individuals black with a fawn throat and a white belly or almost white. Winter fur is slightly lighter than summer fur. Like the hare, it is a typical forest dweller, preferring broad-leaved forests with dense shrubby undergrowth. Prefers areas with thickets of hazel and young oak forests, aspen and birch forests. Its most typical biotopes are small overgrown ridges along rivers and springs. It keeps on low watershed areas with rocks and rocky blockages, in floodplains of rivers, on islands overgrown with shrubs. In winter, it prefers the steep southern slopes of the hills, where little snow accumulates. Willingly populates overgrown burnt areas and cutting areas. Coniferous plantations are avoided. He also does not like old, closed plantations and settles only on their outskirts; avoids open spaces. Like all hares, it is active at night. He arranges daytime resting in dense bushes, under fallen trees and creases, stones; sometimes occupies hollows of fallen trees, root voids and old burrows (for example, badgers). Like many hares, it keeps very “strongly” on its bed, letting a person 2-3 m in. In winter, especially with heavy snowfalls, it burrows into the snow. In inclement weather, it does not come to the surface at all, but feeds under the snow, making passages in its thickness. Shelters are used repeatedly. The individual plot of the Manchurian hare, apparently, does not exceed several hundred square meters. Scared by a man Manchurian hare quickly runs away, but only until it is out of sight. Unlike other hares, he does not confuse his tracks at all, does not make estimates, but tries to get away from the pursuit “directly” and hide. It feeds on the aerial parts of various herbaceous, woody and shrubby plants. It is noted that its range coincides with the range of Lespedeza bicolor and does not go beyond the boundaries of its growth. In winter, like a hare, it switches to feeding on young shoots and bark, mainly poplar and aspen. It feeds on berries, fruits, algae.

Dahurian hamster

The Daurian hamster is a small (slightly larger than a mouse) animal with a short tail. Body length 82-126 mm, tail 20-33 mm. The muzzle is noticeably pointed, the ears are relatively large (up to 17 mm), rounded, the foot is bare, the tail is covered with soft short (sometimes longer and coarser) hair, there are no transverse rings on it.

The color of the top is light brown, with ocher and rusty tones; a black stripe runs along the ridge, sometimes strongly blurred, and in the most light-colored races in winter fur it remains only in the form of a darkening in the region of the occiput. The border between the color of the top and sides is even. The soles are relatively densely pubescent. Calluses are not reduced, but in animals with winter fur they are hidden in wool. In the karyotype 2n = 20.

Skull with relatively long and narrow nasal region. The upper line of its profile, like that of the gray hamster, is evenly convex. The nasal processes of the premaxillary bones only barely extend beyond the frontal margins of the nasals. The longitudinal indentation along the midline of the skull is relatively weakly expressed, especially its part that extends over the frontal bones. The length of the interparietal bone more than three times fits in its width. The upper incisors are noticeably weaker than in the previous species; their free sections deviate slightly backward, and the alveolar ones limit only slightly pronounced depressions on the lateral surfaces of the premaxillary bones.

Reliable fossil remains are unknown. Some signs of similarity with specimens of the modern species are found in extinct forms of gray hamsters in the European part of the former USSR. They are even more pronounced in small hamsters from the ancient Pleistocene of Transbaikalia, the Late Pleistocene-Holocene of Primorye, and also the South. China (Chowkoudian) The first are brought together with C. barabensis, the second - with C. griseus Milne-Edw.

Mouse baby

The smallest of the rodents and one of the smallest mammals on Earth (only the shrew is smaller than it - tiny shrew). Body length 5.5-7 cm, tail - up to 6.5 cm; weighs 7-10 g. The tail is very mobile, grasping, able to twist around stems and thin branches; hind legs are prehensile. The coloration is noticeably brighter than that of the house mouse. The coloration of the back is monophonic, brownish-buff or reddish, sharply demarcated from the white or light gray abdomen. Unlike other mice, the muzzle of the baby mouse is blunt, shortened, and the ears are small. The northern and western subspecies are darker and redder.

The baby mouse inhabits the southern part of the forest and forest-steppe zone, penetrating along the river valleys almost to the Arctic Circle. In the mountains it rises up to 2200 m above sea level (the central part of the Greater Caucasus Range). Prefers open and semi-open habitats with high herbage. It is most numerous in tall grass meadows, including floodplain ones, in subalpine and alpine meadows, on bogs, among rare shrub thickets, weeds on wastelands, on fallow lands, hayfields and borders. In Italy and East Asia it is found in rice fields.

Activity round the clock, intermittent with alternating periods of feeding and sleep. The baby mouse is sensitive to overheating and avoids direct sun rays. A characteristic behavioral feature of the baby mouse is movement along the stems of plants in search of food, as well as the location of the summer nest. The mouse builds on herbaceous plants (sedge, reed) and low bushes round nests with a diameter of 6-13 cm. The nest is located at a height of 40-100 cm. It is intended for breeding offspring and consists of two layers. The outer layer consists of the leaves of the same plant to which the nest is attached; internal - from softer material. Ordinary residential nests are simpler. In autumn and winter, baby mice often move into simple holes, into haystacks and stacks, sometimes into human buildings; laying snow trenches. However, unlike other mice, baby mice do not reproduce under such conditions, bringing offspring only in summer in above-ground nests. They do not hibernate.

Baby mice are poorly social, meeting in pairs only during the breeding season or in large groups (up to 5,000 individuals) in winter, when rodents accumulate in haystacks and granaries. With the onset of heat, adults become aggressive towards each other; males in captivity fight fiercely.

WILD PANTHOFUL ANIMALS

red deer

Dimensions of males length 220-255 cm; height at the shoulders 146-165; head length 52.5-56. Total weight- 170-250 kg. Sizes of females (cm): 185-216; 120-135; 34-48: weight 140-180 kg.

An adult red deer has 10-12 on both horns, less often 14 and, as an exception, 16 processes.

The length of the red deer horns is 87 cm, the span is 82 cm, the length of the largest processes is 32.5 cm and the circumference of the base of the horn is 20

The summer fur of the red deer consists of short hair, close to the body, with a thin base, about 15 mm long, with a light yellowish lower part and a red top. The undercoat is missing. The general type of skin is bright red or yellowish-red, a dark stripe 3-4 cm wide runs along the ridge in the neck and shoulders, the mirror does not stand out from the color of the back, also reddish-red, but is delimited from below by a black strip. The head is covered with very short grayish hair, the legs are brownish. The skin that wears the antlers is covered with velvety brown or grayish wool.

Winter fur. The space from the end of the nose to the ears and the base of the horns of the deep Brown, with some lightening around the eyes, and the hair that dresses it is dense and short, their length is 4-5 mm. The neck is covered with long, up to 60 mm, gray-brown hair, forming a kind of mane in winter and still darkening. The back and sides are dressed with very short (5 mm) light gray fur with a sandy tint in the shoulder area on the ridge and with a brownish coating in the back of the back, formed by dark hair ends. The speculum is yellow-red in color, sharply delimited from the sides by a black stripe 3.5 cm wide.

Juveniles are distinguished by a reddish coloration of a shorter and sparse mane in the area between the ears. The juvenile coloration of the young, like that of all deer of the genus Cervus, is red with several rows of white spots.

The tail vertebrae of the red deer are covered with a thin layer of tendons and muscles, dressed in a glandular dark brown tissue of a granular structure, weighing about 300 g. This gland consists of two lobes lying on the sides of the tail and connected together from above and below, also going to the base of the tail. Together with this gland and the skin that covers it, the tail looks like a fleshy, bluntly rounded cylinder, (5-6 cm in diameter and 15 cm long) slightly thinning towards the end. The red deer, like all other representatives of the genus Cervus, has lacrimal pits that secrete a resinous yellowish "sulfur". On the metatarsus of the red deer, on the outer side, in the upper third, there is an oval area with thickened skin and bristly, reddish-yellow hair, several times longer than the dark brown hair surrounding them.

The red deer's hoof is short and wide. Its dimensions for a bull are as follows: the front leg is 11 cm long, compressed width 9 cm, height along leading edge 7 cm; hind leg length 11 cm, width 8.3 cm, height 7.5 cm. In the female, it is relatively more elongated. As with all artiodactyls, each half of the hoof is slightly asymmetrical, with the inner half narrower. In summer, the hoof is dense with a rounded, evenly worn edge, which does not protrude beyond the sole (which is observed in the elk, which lives more on soft moss cover), but forms one plane with the latter. The angle formed by the connection of the hoof with the pastern, and the angles formed by the joints separate parts limbs, close to 180º. The hoof is very strong, relatively bluntly ending, and the structure of the limbs as a whole corresponds to the load placed on them by the weight of a heavy animal, and the manner of its movement.

Red deer live in the mountains on steep, often rocky slopes; in the valleys, extensive areas of pebbles along the banks of the rivers are also common, that is, there is almost always a solid substrate under the feet of the red deer. Normally, animals move at a walk, not avoiding the steepest and stony places, and even walk along placers, and in case of alarm they move strong. high jumps, vigorously pushing off the ground. Red deer run a little at a trot and move from jumping to a walk. The nature of the movement in bulls and females is slightly different. Females mostly gallop, bending their spine more strongly and vigorously, while bulls trot more often.

Amur goral

One of the rarest ungulates in Russia - goral - is found in the Sikhote-Alin mountains. This species is endangered and has survived only in the most inaccessible parts of the ridge. Favorite habitats are steep rocky cliffs descending directly to the sea. Goral jumps with amazing ease along steep steeps, making swift jerks and jumping up to two meters. Gorals are not adapted to a long run and try not to move away from the saving rocks. Currently, the total number of these animals is estimated at 500-700 individuals, of which only 200 gorals live outside the protected areas. Hunting and trapping of the goral has been prohibited since 1924, the species is listed in the Red Books of the IUCN and Russia.

Ussuri sika deer

endemic species ungulates, listed in the Red Book of Russia - Ussuri sika deer. The summer coloring of these animals is very beautiful - numerous white spots are scattered over a bright orange background. No wonder the Chinese call this deer “hua-lu”, which means “deer-flower”. It is believed that in Primorye there are two ecological forms of this narrow-range subspecies - wild and park. It is wild deer populations that are protected by law. At present, aboriginal populations have survived only in the Lazovsky and Olginsky districts, mainly in the Lazovsky Reserve and the territory adjacent to it. Deer, unlike bovids (bulls, goats and rams), change their antlers every year. In the first stages of growth, deer antlers are soft, covered with delicate skin with hair; only by autumn do they become hard and ossify. Horns before ossification are called antlers and are widely used for the preparation of the drug pantocrine. It was this fact that served as one of the reasons for the extermination of spotted deer at the beginning of the century.

musk deer

The original small deer musk deer weighs only up to 10 kg. Unlike other sika deer and red deer, male musk deer are hornless, but they have sharp fangs 6-8 cm long in the upper jaw. The hind legs of the musk deer are much longer than the front ones, which allows it to easily jump up to 7 m. With a calm step, it walks “hunched over”, and if necessary to get its usual winter food (lichens) from the trees, it stands on its hind legs, resting its front legs against the trunk. In males, a peculiar gland is located on the belly, the so-called “musk jet”, which is a bag the size of a chicken egg, filled with a musk-like brown mass with the smell of sulfuric ether - musk, which is widely used, for example, in perfumery production to fix perfume smells.

Boar

Speaking about the ungulates of Primorye, one cannot fail to mention the Ussuri subspecies of the wild boar, which is well distinguished from the other four subspecies by its large body size. Outwardly, the wild boar bears little resemblance to the domestic pig. This is a massive animal on strong legs, with a strongly developed front girdle, a very thick and short neck and a powerful head, which makes up about a third of the entire body length. There are still old male billhooks weighing up to 300 kg, although the average weight of wild boars, taking into account young ones, is much less, about 70 kg. From the end of November, the rut begins in wild boars, accompanied by fierce fights among males. And young piglets are born at the end of March - April, when there is still snow. The piglets, having left the specially constructed “gaino” nest, already from the fifth day on their own look for food under the protection of their mother, who continues to walk with them until the spring of next year.

REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ORDER OF PREDATORS

Amur tiger

A rare subspecies of the tiger lives in Primorye, the number of which has stabilized at a low level. Over the past century, the population of the Amur tiger has experienced profound and dramatic changes: from a relatively high population at the beginning of the century to a deep decline in the late 1930s and early 1940s, when about 20-30 animals remained in the entire range within the country, then gradual increase until 1990, when the number of tigers may have reached the level of 300 - 350 individuals. The main factor that brought the tiger to the brink of extinction was the direct persecution of it by man, and the turning point in its fate was the introduction in Russia since 1947 of the legislative protection of the tiger. Although there is no immediate threat of extinction for this subspecies, its future continues to be of great concern. In most regions of the region, there is a clear imbalance in the population density of the main species of potential prey of the predator and the predator itself. The most important negative factor was the intensified poaching, which has acquired since the beginning of the 90s. commercial nature (skins, bones and other parts of dead tigers are sold in most countries of East Asia as valuable medicinal raw materials). At present, a detailed “Strategy for the Conservation of the Amur Tiger in Russia” has been adopted and comprehensive efforts are being made to normalize the situation with this rare and wonderful predator.

Far Eastern leopard

Another endangered predator is the Far Eastern, or Amur, leopard*, which is the northernmost of all leopard subspecies. Its population is considered genetically isolated and requires the adoption of measures to preserve it as a genetically unique component in the system of species diversity of both the region and the world as a whole. Currently, there are no more than 50 leopards in the region, and scientists are making every effort to save this animal from extinction. The weight of the leopard does not exceed 80 kg. His winter fur is thick, with bright colors: black or black-brown solid or rosette spots are scattered over an ocher-red background. The leopard walks and jumps completely without noise, and the bright colors perfectly mask it in any season, so it is very rare to see this slender cat with soft smooth movements.

Red Wolf

It's pretty large animal with a body length of 76-110 cm, a tail - 45-50 cm and a weight of 17-21 kg. His appearance combines the features of a wolf, a fox and a jackal. From common wolf the red wolf is distinguished by coloration, fluffy hair and a longer tail, almost reaching the ground. Characterized by a short, pointed muzzle. The ears are large, erect, with rounded tops, set high on the head.

The general tone of color is red, highly variable in individual individuals and in different parts of the range. The end of the tail is black. Wolf cubs up to 3 months - dark brown. The hairline in winter is very high, thick and soft; in summer noticeably shorter, rougher and darker. The tail is fluffy, like a fox. Based on the variability of color, fur density and body size, 10 subspecies of the red wolf are described, 2 of them are found on the territory of Russia.

The red wolf differs from other representatives of the canine family in a reduced number of molars (there are 2 in each half of the jaw) and a large number of nipples (6-7 pairs).

The red wolf is a typical inhabitant of the mountains, rising up to 4000 m above sea level. For most of the year, it lives in the subalpine and alpine belts, in the south of its range - in low- and mid-mountain tropical forests, and in the northeastern regions - in mountain taiga, but everywhere his stay is confined to rocky places and gorges. It does not settle on open plains, but in search of food it makes long seasonal migrations, sometimes appearing in unusual landscapes - forest-steppe, steppe, and even in deserts. With the establishment of a high snow cover in the mountains, the predator, following wild artiodactyls - argali, mountain goats, roe deer and marals - descends to the foothills or moves to the southern sunny slopes and other areas with little snow. Rarely attacks pets. In summer, he regularly eats plant foods.

The red wolf lives and hunts in packs of 5-12 individuals (sometimes more), apparently uniting animals of several generations. Relations within the pack are usually non-aggressive. It hunts mainly during the day, chasing prey for a long time. Prey ranges from rodents and lizards to deer (sambar, axis) and antelope (nilgai, blackbuck). A large pack can cope with a gaur bull, a leopard and a tiger. Unlike many canines, red wolves kill game by attacking from behind rather than by the throat. Two or three red wolves can kill a 50 kg deer in less than 2 minutes.

Shelters for red wolves are usually rock crevices, caves and niches in the slopes; they don't burrow. They have a developed ear, swim well and jump well - they are able to overcome a distance of up to 6 m in length. Red wolves avoid people; in captivity they breed, but are not tamed.

Amur wild forest cat

Common, but not numerous in the forests of Primorye, wild forest cat, the smallest representative of the feline in the Far East.

The beast weighs 4-6 kilograms, and especially large individuals - fat males in autumn - up to 8-10 kilograms. The length of their strong flexible body is from 60 to 85 centimeters, for the "record holders" - up to a meter.

The dense reddish-yellow winter coat is covered with many dark rusty spots, merging into stripes in places.

Two white arrows stand out on the forehead, vague rings are noticeable on the tail, the abdomen is off-white with a yellowish tint. Unlike domestic cats, wild forest cats from time immemorial wear "fur coats" of the same color, the same pattern, the same thickness.

Like all members of the cat family, a wild cat has sharp teeth and claws, keen hearing and excellent eyesight. He's a great tree climber.

Quite long legs allow him to make big jumps and rapid throws, from which not only a mouse or a hare, but also a bird rarely dodges.

The force is enough to lift a young roe deer. But he is not capable of a long chase: there is no wolf or harzine endurance.

However, like all cats, a wild cat is lazy and prefers rest to everything. He walks only when necessary, slowly, carefully, usually not on the ground, but on deadwood and trees.

The forest cat leads a twilight-night lifestyle, although sometimes it stays awake during the day - in case of extreme need. He usually arranges a nest in hollows of standing and fallen trees, in small caves or among stones, covered from rain and winds, occasionally in dry burrows between tree roots and under deadwood. During the day he sleeps with pleasure, goes hunting at sunset.

The cat's gastronomic preferences are mice, voles, chipmunks, Manchurian hare, squirrels, birds no larger than pheasants and ducks. Sometimes it attacks the column and mink, which it easily copes with, and even roe deer, even piglets. Unlike domestic cats, it is not afraid of water, swims well, recklessly catches fish, frogs and other aquatic animals, on occasion it will not fail to catch gaping sandpipers or muskrats.

In summer and early autumn, when food is plentiful, the cat gets very fat, but in winter, especially when deep snow falls, it is difficult for him: he does not know how to catch mice and voles like foxes under the snow, chipmunks and frogs sleep, but he does not know how to catch a hare or a bird , deeply falling into the snow, it is not easy to catch.

The forest cat is a close relative of the common domestic cat, they even produce common offspring. Beautiful and slender, children are more like wild parents both in appearance and in disposition. But what is strange: being relatives of our cute and obedient murks and vaskas, forest cats are very difficult to tame and train.

Only when caught by very small blind kittens and raised in tireless care and affection, they become completely tame, friendly and do not seek to demonstrate the strength of their claws and teeth in any case. At the first opportunity, these freedom-loving animals run away into the forest, but soon return to the person who raised them.

Some fifty years ago, the northern border of the range of the Amur forest cat passed along the left bank of the Amur region - through the middle parts of the Zeya, Bureya, Urmi and Kura, down the Amur, going beyond Komsomolsk. Now it has shifted far to the south, covering only the southern part of Primorsky Krai.

In the 1930s, when harvesting of the skins of this animal reached 2 thousand pieces, its livestock was apparently estimated at 8-10 thousand individuals, of which about 80% lived in Primorye. By the beginning of the 70s, the former cat population had decreased to 2 thousand, and all of them were concentrated in the Primorsky Territory, and now there are 2 times less of them - no more than 1 thousand for the entire region.

Brown bear

The brown bear, the largest bear in Europe and Asia, is widely distributed throughout the Ussuri region, although the main part of the species habitat is confined to the central part of Sikhote-Alin. Most of the time this animal spends in search of food, feeding mainly on plant foods. As is known, brown bears hibernate, using dens for wintering, located under the eversion of a tree or in a windbreak in coniferous forests, mainly in deaf, deep-snow areas of the mountains. Insufficiently well-fed for normal winter sleep, bears do not hibernate. These are the so-called “rods”, which have a habit of wandering around the taiga all winter in search of any food, up to the remnants of wolf “meals”. They attack ungulates and are dangerous for humans when they meet.

Himalayan bear

The Himalayan bear, which is popularly called either white-breasted or black, is distributed only in the southern part of the Far East, living in deciduous forests. They are markedly different from brown bears. Their fur is silky, black with a white spot on the chest in the form of a flying bird. Large males of 200 kg are rare, and females usually weigh no more than 100 kg. Himalayan bears spend about 15% of their lives among the crowns of trees, eating berries, acorns and nuts. For the winter, they lay down in mid-November, before the snow. Lairs are arranged in hollows of soft tree species - poplar or linden. In the same place, females in February will give birth to two, less often three blind cubs, only 500 grams in weight. The species is included in the Red Book of Russia. However, at present, the process of reducing the number of this species has been stopped and the number of bears in Primorye has increased markedly.

STUDY OF TERRESTRIAL MAMMALS

The richest fauna of Primorsky Krai includes 82 species of terrestrial mammals, many of which are endemic, listed in the Red Books of various ranks or simply rare, requiring special protection measures.

Insectivores

The order of insectivores is represented by the Ussuri moger, a close relative of the European mole. In the south of the region, there is also a Japanese mohera, listed in the Red Book of the Russian Federation. The endemic of the region is the Amur hedgehog, the "Red Book" - a giant shrew, whose mass reaches 15 grams.

Bats

There are 15 species of bats in Primorye, some of which (long-toed, long-tailed and Ikonnikova bats, eastern leather, eastern and leather-like bats) are very few in number. In the south of the region, the Ussuri small tube-billed whale lives, and in the south of the Khasansky district there is a colony of the common long-winged bat, listed in the Red Book of the Russian Federation. The most numerous wintering species is the brown earflap.

rodents

Rodents are the most numerous inhabitants of the region. The long-tailed mouse, zokor, flying squirrel, and the Manchurian squirrel, the largest subspecies of the common squirrel, live here.
Chipmunks, East Asian mouse and mouse, red and red-gray voles, field mice, Far Eastern voles, two types of hamsters - rat-like and Dahurian are common. Two species of hares live in Primorye - Manchurian and hare.

artiodactyls

Seven species of artiodactyl animals live in Primorsky Krai: red deer, Amur goral, wild spotted deer, roe deer, musk deer, elk and wild boar. The rarest of them is the goral, which lives in the Sikhote-Alin mountains and is listed in the Red Books of the region and the Russian Federation.
The Ussuri spotted deer is also included in the Red Book, the wild population of which has been preserved only in the Lazovsky Reserve.
The local Ussuri wild boar is distinguished by its large size - old male billhooks reach 300 kg of weight.

Predators

The edge feline family includes: the lynx, the wild cat, the tiger, and the leopard. Under special protection is the population of the Amur tiger, which is on the verge of extinction.
The Far Eastern, or Amur, leopard, the northernmost of all leopard subspecies, is also under the threat of extinction.
Two types of bears live in the region - brown and Himalayan (white-breasted). The population of the latter, listed in the Red Book of the Russian Federation, has recently increased and now does not cause fear of extinction.

The fox, raccoon dog, wolf and the “Red Book” red wolf live in the region from the canine family.
Their predators of the marten family in the region are wolverine, sable, badger, harza, weasel, ermine, Siberian weasel, American mink, saltwort and otter.

Offers

  • National Park "Call of the Tiger"

    The Call of the Tiger National Park is located in the heart of the Ussuri taiga, at the junction of Lazovsky, Chuguevsky and Olginsky districts. Territory national park covers part of the Sikhote-Alin ridge, the mountain system of Mount Oblachnaya, the upper part of the Milogradovka (Van-Chin) river basin, the upper reaches of the Ussuri river, and the headwaters of the Kievka river. Within the national park there are more than 50 peaks over 1000 meters high and Mount Cloudy (1854 m) - the most high peak Primorye.

  • Ussuri State Nature Reserve

    The Ussuriysky State Reserve is located on the territory of the Ussuriysky and Shkotovsky districts of Primorsky Krai. The reserve was founded in 1932 and until 1973 was called Suputinsky. Until 1972, the area of ​​the reserve was 16.55 thousand hectares, at present its area has been expanded to 40.43 thousand hectares.

  • Sikhote-Alin Reserve

    The reserve was founded in 1935 on the territory of the Krasnoarmeisky, Terneisky and Dalnegorsky regions of Primorsky Krai. The total area of ​​the reserve is 387.2 thousand hectares, of which 2.9 thousand hectares are in the sea and 4 thousand hectares in the Abrek tract. The reserve is located on the eastern and western slopes mountain system Sikhote-Alin and stretches for 1200 km in length, with a width of 250 km.

  • Moose State Zoological (Hunting) Sanctuary

    The Moose State Zoological (Hunting) Sanctuary was established in 1986 on the territory of the Terneisky District, in the northern part of the Primorsky Territory. The area of ​​the reserve is 26 thousand hectares.


The Amur tiger has become a kind of symbol of the Primorsky Territory. More importantly, this unique cat is endangered. A rare subspecies of the tiger lives in Primorye, the number of which has stabilized at a low level. Over the past century, the population of the Amur tiger has experienced profound and dramatic changes: in the late 1930s and early 1940s, when about an order of animals remained in the entire range within the country, then a turning point to a gradual increase until 1990, when the number of tigers may reached the level of individuals. The main factor that brought the tiger to the brink of extinction was the direct persecution of it by man, since 1947. Legislative protection of the tiger has been introduced in Russia. The most important negative factor was the intensified poaching, which has acquired since the beginning of the 90s. commercial nature (skins, bones and other parts of dead tigers are sold in most countries of East Asia as valuable medicinal raw materials). At present, a detailed Strategy for the Conservation of the Amur Tiger in Russia has been adopted and comprehensive efforts are being made to normalize the situation with this rare and beautiful predator.


Far Eastern or amur leopard, is the northernmost of all leopard subspecies. Its population is considered genetically isolated and requires the adoption of measures to preserve it as a genetically unique component in the system of species diversity of both the region and the world as a whole. Currently, there are no more than 50 leopards in the region, and scientists are making every effort to save this animal from extinction. The weight of the leopard does not exceed 80 kg. His winter fur is thick, with bright colors: black or black-brown solid or clustered spots. The leopard walks and jumps completely without noise, and the bright colors perfectly mask it in any season, so it is very rare to see this slender cat with soft smooth movements.


Wild forest cat, the smallest feline in the Far East. Individuals of a wild cat are much larger than domestic cats, old males weigh up to 10 kg. Feeds on rodents, hazel grouse, pheasants, crushes young roes. The way of life is hidden, nocturnal, and spends the day in hollows, rocks, in thickets of bushes.


The brown bear, the largest bear in Europe and Asia, is widely distributed throughout the Ussuri Territory, although the main part of the species habitat is confined to the central part of Sikhote-Alin. Most of the time this animal spends in search of food, feeding mainly on plant foods. As is known, brown bears hibernate, using dens for wintering, located under the eversion of a tree or in a windbreak in coniferous forests, mainly in deaf, deep-snow areas of the mountains. Insufficiently well-fed for normal winter sleep, bears do not hibernate. These are the so-called connecting rods, which have a habit of wandering through the taiga all winter in search of any food, up to the remnants of wolf meals. They attack ungulates and are dangerous for humans when they meet.


The Himalayan bear, which is popularly called either white-breasted or black, is distributed only in the southern part of the Far East, living in deciduous forests. They are markedly different from brown bears. Their fur is silky, black with a white spot on the chest in the form of a flying bird. Large males of 200 kg are rare, and females usually weigh no more than 100 kg. Himalayan bears spend about 15% of their lives among the crowns of trees, eating berries, acorns and nuts. For the winter, they lay down in mid-November, before the snow. Lairs are arranged in hollows of soft tree species - poplar or linden. In the same place, females in February will give birth to two, less often three blind cubs, only 500 grams in weight. The species is included in the Red Book of Russia. However, at present, the process of reducing the number of this species has been stopped and the number of bears in Primorye has increased markedly.


The red wolf is listed in the Red Books of the IUCN and Russia. As early as the beginning of the 20th century, packs of red wolves regularly appeared throughout their range in Russia, but since the 1930s, each case of meeting this animal has become an exceptional rarity. The disappearance of this species in the coastal region was a catastrophic reduction in its numbers in the adjacent territory of China, from where, apparently, its races to the territory of Russia took place. The red wolf at present cannot be considered a permanent species of the fauna of Primorye until its reproduction in this territory is proved.


One of the rarest ungulates in Russia - goral * - is found in the mountains of Sikhote-Alin. This species is endangered and has survived only in the most inaccessible parts of the ridge. Favorite habitats are steep rocky cliffs descending directly to the sea. Goral jumps with amazing ease along steep steeps, making swift jerks and jumping up to two meters. Gorals are not adapted to a long run and try not to move away from the saving rocks. Currently, the total number of these animals is estimated in individuals, of which only 200 gorals live outside the protected areas. Hunting and trapping of the goral has been prohibited since 1924, the species is listed in the Red Books of the IUCN and Russia.


Ussuri spotted deer. The summer coloration of these animals is very beautiful - numerous white spots are scattered over a bright orange background. No wonder the Chinese call this deer hua-lu, which means flower deer. It is believed that in Primorye there are two ecological forms of this narrow-range subspecies - wild and park. It is wild deer populations that are protected by law. At present, aboriginal populations have survived only in the Lazovsky and Olginsky districts, mainly in the Lazovsky Reserve and the territory adjacent to it. Deer, unlike bovids (bulls, goats and rams), change their antlers every year. In the first stages of growth, deer antlers are soft, covered with delicate skin with hair; only by autumn do they become hard and ossify. Horns before ossification are called antlers and are widely used for the preparation of the drug pantocrine. It was this fact that served as one of the reasons for the extermination of spotted deer at the beginning of the century.


In the south of the Khasansky district, there is the only colony in Russia of the long-winged longwing, listed in the Red Book of Russia. Unfortunately, this colony, which numbered up to 1000 individuals, was located in fortifications on the border with China, and there is evidence that it was destroyed in connection with the recently completed demarcation of the Russian-Chinese border. The species is a giant shrew that fully justifies its name: its weight reaches 15 g. This animal is so rare that not a single adult male has yet been caught, and not many zoological museums in the world can boast of having at least one specimen. this shrew.

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