{"id":995,"date":"2025-07-22T00:21:20","date_gmt":"2025-07-22T00:21:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.kiwaniscluboflombard.org\/?p=995"},"modified":"2025-07-28T12:05:23","modified_gmt":"2025-07-28T12:05:23","slug":"rare-and-remarkable-wildlife-of-borneo-a-jungle-safari","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.kiwaniscluboflombard.org\/index.php\/2025\/07\/22\/rare-and-remarkable-wildlife-of-borneo-a-jungle-safari\/","title":{"rendered":"Rare and Remarkable Wildlife of Borneo: A Jungle Safari"},"content":{"rendered":"
Borneo\u2019s tropical rainforests rank among the most biodiverse ecosystems on Earth. More than 130 million years old\u2014making them 70 million years older than the Amazon\u2014these ancient forests harbor creatures as extraordinary as they are unexpected. Here, scientists have discovered a lungless frog that breathes through its skin, a so-called \u201cninja slug\u201d that fires love darts at its mate, the world\u2019s longest insect, a deer that barks, and even tiny pygmy elephants. It\u2019s no wonder Borneo is considered a wonderland of bizarre and astonishing wildlife.<\/p>\n
The numbers are just as impressive: roughly 222 species of mammals (44 found nowhere else), 420 birds (37 endemic), 100 amphibians, and 394 fish (19 endemic). Between 1995 and 2010 alone, researchers identified more than 600 new species\u2014an average of three per month\u2014and over 50 of these were entirely new to science.<\/p>\n
Let\u2019s meet some of the unique creatures you can hope to meet on a Borneo adventure<\/a>:<\/p>\n Orangutan<\/a> translates to \u201cman of the forest,\u201d which makes sense given this primate\u2019s uncanny human resemblance. Like us, orangutans have four fingers and a thumb and fingernails. These highly intelligent animals with shaggy reddish fur live in the lowlands and are relatively solitary. They make nests in trees of vegetation to sleep at night and rest during the day, making them the heaviest tree-dwelling animal. They have prominent cheek pads called flanges and a throat sac used to make loud verbalizations.<\/p>\n Sadly, orangutan numbers are sharply declining due to habitat being lost at an extremely high rate from the conversion of forests to oil palm plantations and other agricultural development.<\/strong><\/a> Fires also destroy massive areas of orangutan habitat. Despite legal protection in Indonesia since 1931, orangutans are still captured and kept in households as status symbols or hunted as food. Females give birth to just one infant every eight or nine years, making their populations very susceptible to even low levels of hunting.<\/p>\n Orangutans feast on wild fruits like lychees, mangosteens and figs and play a vital role in the dispersal of seeds over a huge area. If orangutans were to disappear, so would several tree species.<\/p>\n The proboscis monkey<\/a>, or nasalislarvatus<\/em>, is a weird little reddish\u2013brown primate with a long nose (we\u2019re talking up to 7 inches in males!). In this species, size really does matter. The longer the nose, the better to attract a potential mate. It also serves to amplify the sound of warning calls. Living on a diet of mainly mangrove shoots and insects to maintain its distinctive pot belly, the proboscis monkey is a strictly protected animal, with experts suggesting that there are only around 1,000 remaining in the wild.<\/p>\n A far cry from the life of a polar bear, sun bears<\/a> (also known as honey bears) live in the dense lowland forests of Southeast Asia. A nocturnal and shy species, they are rare to see in the wild. The sun bear is arboreal, so you\u2019ll need to keep your eyes on the trees if you want to see one. You can tell the sun bear from other species from the distinctive horseshoe marks on their chest\u2014no two markings are ever the same! Their tongues are up to 10 inches long and help them to satiate their voracious appetite for honey.<\/p>\n Sun bears are essential members of their ecosystem because they help disperse seeds while also keeping pesky termites in check. Unfortunately, their global population has declined 30% over the last few years, making them the second-rarest bear species next to the Giant Panda. On our Nat Hab Wilds of Borneo tour<\/strong><\/a>,<\/strong> we have the chance to enjoy a private visit to the Bornean Sun Bear Conservation Center<\/a>. Founded in 2008, the center provides care, rehabilitation and release of orphaned and captive sun bears and increases awareness about the plight of this little-known bear.<\/p>\n \u00a9 Frendi Apen Irawan<\/p>\n<\/div>\n The critically endangered Sunda pangolin<\/a> has been called an \u201cartichoke with legs.\u201d These prehistoric animals have existed for 80 million years. This funky little critter is the only mammal covered in protective keratin scales and has a freaky tongue that stretches out longer than its body. Lacking teeth, this long, sticky tongue serves to collect ants and termites. Though we know they feast on a diet of ants and insects, there\u2019s still little known about these elusive, nocturnal animals with prehensile tails. We do know that when threatened, they protect their soft underparts by crunching into a roly-poly ball.<\/p>\n The nocturnal sambar deer is one of the biggest species of deer in the world. Adult males can reach a length of more than 7 feet and weigh more than 440 pounds (one on record even came in at over a thousand pounds!). They are at home in the Bornean rainforests and are some of the easiest animals to spot at dusk. They are timid, but when disturbed, their first instinct is to freeze before responding to predators with loud barks called \u2018pooking\u2019 or \u2018belling.\u2019 They also dramatically stomp their feet, and their mane will rise in a confrontational manner. They have been listed as a vulnerable species on the IUCN Red List since 2008.<\/p>\n It\u2019s probably easiest to call it by its other name, the \u201cMatang narrow-mouthed frog.\u201d This newly discovered species is around the size of a pea, making it the second smallest frog in the world, and it loves to live around pitcher plants in Kubah National Park. They were discovered after scientists tracked the unique and powerful croaks of the males. While they are physically tiny, their voice is huge and travels far distances.<\/p>\n \u00a9 Bernard Dupont<\/p>\n<\/div>\n These wonderful weirdos with excellent leaping and climbing skills look quite similar to Yoda. They are nocturnal, and their massive yellow eyes help them maneuver through the dark. The size of one of their eyeballs is the same size as their brain, making them the largest-eyed mammal in the world relative to their body size. The forward-facing slope of their eyes allows tarsiers to accurately assess distances for safe leaping\u2014helpful, considering they can leap up to 18 feet. Tarsiers are also capable of turning their heads nearly 180\u00b0 in each direction, meaning that they can rotate their heads almost 360\u00b0.<\/p>\n While they may come across as cute, tarsiers are the only living carnivorous primate species, and they use their dexterous hands to aggressively ensnare their prey. Their medley of insect snacks includes beetles, cockroaches, locusts, moths, grasshoppers, butterflies, ants and cicadas. For a feast, they will go after birds, bats, frogs and snakes\u2014including poisonous species.<\/p>\n While not technically a deer or a mouse (it\u2019s actually classified as a tragulidae<\/em>), this nocturnal and solitary critter reaches a not-so-towering height of barely 12 inches, making it the smallest hooved animal in the world. Overachievers, these females can conceive just two hours after birth, and newborn fauns can stand after 30 minutes. They are found on forest floors feeding on leaves, shoots, fruits and sometimes even fungi.<\/p>\n With round bodies and spindly legs, they look almost like a stuffed animal\u2014but inside that cute little mouth are some mighty fangs. A male will angrily beat his hooves when agitated or to ward off predators and warn other mouse deer of danger. Although they are land mammals, they can hold their breath for up to four minutes and often leap into the water to escape predators.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
Orangutan<\/h2>\n
Proboscis Monkey<\/h2>\n
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Sun Bear<\/h2>\n
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Sunda Pangolin<\/h2>\n
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Sambar Deer<\/h2>\n
Microhyla Nepenthicola<\/em><\/h2>\n
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Horsfield\u2019s Tarsier<\/h2>\n
Mouse Deer<\/h2>\n
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Borneo Pygmy Elephant<\/h2>\n