An Amur leopard resting in a snowy forest for an article about Amur leopard recovery

Amur leopard numbers have grown fivefold in Russia’s Far East

Fewer than 30 years ago, the Amur leopard was running out of time. Wild numbers had crashed to roughly 25 individuals — a threshold so low that population geneticists use it as a benchmark for effective extinction. Today, an estimated 130 Amur leopards live in Russia’s Far East alone, a recovery built from coordinated habitat protection, cross-border diplomacy, and one of the most targeted national park designs in conservation history.

At a glance

  • Amur leopard recovery: Wild population has grown from approximately 25 individuals in the late 1990s to around 130 in Russia today — a more than fivefold increase driven by anti-poaching patrols, prey restoration, and protected habitat.
  • Camera trap monitoring: Advanced camera trap networks confirm that leopards regularly cross from Russia into northeastern China’s Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces, a sign that the population is actively expanding its range rather than simply holding ground.
  • Land of the Leopard National Park: Established in 2012 in Russia’s Primorsky Krai region, the park covers nearly 650,000 acres encompassing every known Amur leopard breeding territory and supports year-round anti-poaching and fire management teams.

A park designed around one species

The single most consequential decision in the Amur leopard’s turnaround was the creation of Land of the Leopard National Park in 2012. Unlike protected areas drawn around geography or existing land use, this park was mapped deliberately to enclose every breeding territory the leopards still occupied. That design distinction matters more than it might sound.

By protecting core habitat rather than peripheral buffer zones, the park allowed prey populations — particularly sika deer and roe deer — to rebound alongside the cats. Stable prey means stable predators. Anti-poaching teams and fire suppression operations, both perennial threats in this part of the Russian Far East, became permanent fixtures of park management rather than emergency responses dispatched after damage was done.

The result was a protected landscape capable of sustaining not just survival but slow, measurable growth across successive generations.

Science and diplomacy working in the same direction

Leopards don’t recognize international borders. Camera trap data consistently shows Amur leopards moving between Russia and China — movement that researchers treat as one of the clearest indicators of genuine population health, because it signals that the population has grown large enough to push individuals into new territory.

Both governments have responded to that signal. Russia and China have coordinated habitat protections on their respective sides of the border, supported by international organizations including the World Wildlife Fund and the Amur Leopard and Tiger Alliance. The longer-term ambition is a seamless transboundary protected area allowing leopards to move freely across an ecologically connected landscape — an approach conservation scientists increasingly favor for wide-ranging species that need more territory than any single country can provide.

Similar logic has guided marine conservation successes. Ghana’s marine protected area at Cape Three Points demonstrated that reserves designed with ecological connectivity in mind tend to outperform isolated patches over time — a principle that applies across ecosystems.

The genetic challenge that remains

The Amur leopard’s recovery is real, and it is incomplete. The population’s long bottleneck at such small numbers created a genetic crisis that growing headcounts alone cannot fix. Inbreeding reduces immune function and reproductive success, making even an expanding population fragile in ways that aren’t visible in annual census figures.

Conservation teams are working toward a targeted solution: relocating carefully selected leopards from accredited zoo populations into the wild to introduce new genetic material. The IUCN Red List still classifies the Amur leopard as Critically Endangered — and rightly so. This kind of managed gene flow has precedent in other felid recovery programs, but it requires meticulous planning to avoid disrupting established social structures in the wild population.

It is a reminder that population counts are a starting point, not a finish line.

What this recovery tells us

The Amur leopard’s trajectory matters beyond its own species. It demonstrates that the combination of protected core habitat, reduced poaching pressure, cross-border political cooperation, and rigorous scientific monitoring can reverse even severe decline in a large, range-dependent predator — arguably the hardest category of animal to bring back.

This fits a broader pattern. Renewables now make up nearly half of global power capacity, reflecting a similar dynamic: human decisions, made persistently and backed by evidence, can bend trajectories in better directions. The data increasingly supports that conclusion across domains.

One hundred and thirty animals is a fragile foothold, not a completed recovery. But it is a foothold that didn’t exist a generation ago, built by scientists, park rangers, governments, and conservation organizations choosing — year after year — to act. The WWF’s ongoing Amur leopard program continues to track the population and support habitat protection across the region.

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About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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