Ursus thibetanus, G. Cuvier, 1823
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4522.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C24EFA8A-A5A0-4B06-A0A9-632F542B9529 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4571230 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A0BE3B-644A-FFFD-FF4F-FA45FDC25676 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Ursus thibetanus |
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Ursus thibetanus View in CoL View at ENA G. [Baron] Cuvier, 1823 —Asian Black Bear
Ursus thibetanus G. Cuvier, 1823 p.325 View in CoL ; Type locality- Assam, India; Won, 1968 p.276; Han, 1994 p.46; Won & Smith, 1999 p.17.
Selenarctos ussuricus Heude, 1901 p.2 View in CoL ; Type locality- Ussuri , Russia.
S. thibetanus wulsini Howell, 1928 p.115 ; Type locality- Chihli , Hebei, China (not Chiri/or Jiri, Korea; often, Korean bear scientists confused Chiri with Chihli).
U. ussuricus: Kishida & Mori, 1931 p.379 View in CoL .
U. thibetanus ussuricus: Kuroda, 1939 p.32 View in CoL ; Won, 1958 p.440; Won, 1967 p.127; Won, 1968 p.277.
S. thibetanus ussuricus: Ellerman & Morrison-Scott, 1951 p.239 View in CoL ; Yoon, 1992 p.98.
S. thibetanus: Oh, 2004a p.162 View in CoL .
Range: Despite unofficial reports of Asian black bears, wild populations in South Korea can be considered extirpated. However, bear farms now exist throughout the country, and several bears from these farms escape every year. A restoration project with nonindigenous bears implemented in 2001 at Mt. Jiri National Park had limited success. A natural population of black bears existed on Mt. Myohyang in the 2000s and even the isolated and heavily human-populated Mt. Guwol had a population (W. Duckworth, IUCN, 2015, pers. comm.). Populations of black bears also reside in the Mt. Baekdu and Mt. Geumgang areas of North Korea ( Kim et al. 2015; Fig. 41 View FIGURE 41 ).
Remarks: The subspecific name of black bears in the Korean Peninsula has traditionally been U. t. ussuricus Heude, 1901 , Ussuri black bear.
Conservation status: The South Korean Government designated the Asian black bear as a Natural Monument in 1982 and an endangered species in 1997. For the recovery project in South Korea, bears were released in 2001 from a bear farm near Seoul. These bears had a recall in 2004 due to a dispute about their origin. Since 2004, bears from a bear orphanage in Russia, bears from a bear farm in China, and bears from Pyongyang Zoo in North Korea have been released. According to genetic analysis, these three sources belonged to the same subspecies (U. t. ussuricus ) as the indigenous inhabitant of Korea ( Kim et al. 2011b). The NIBR (2012) considered South Korean populations as ‘Endangered’, and North Korea classified this species as ‘Vulnerable’. Ursus thibetanus is also protected by CITES Appendix I.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Ursus thibetanus
Jo, Yeong-Seok, Baccus, John T. & Koprowski, John L. 2018 |
S. thibetanus: Oh, 2004a p.162
Oh 2004: |
S. thibetanus ussuricus:
Yoon 1992: |
Ellerman & Morrison-Scott 1951: |
U. thibetanus ussuricus:
Won 1968: |
Won 1967: |
Won 1958: |
Kuroda 1939: |
U. ussuricus:
Kishida & Mori 1931: |
S. thibetanus wulsini
Howell 1928: |
Selenarctos ussuricus
Heude 1901: |
Ursus thibetanus G. Cuvier, 1823 p .325
Won & Smith 1999: |
Han 1994: |
Won 1968: |
Cuvier, G. & Barron 1823: |