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I spent a month mammal watching in SE Asia during the early part of the rainy season in September 2004. There were plenty of animals to see, though wherever I went people would tell me that mammals (or at least the ones I was looking for) were easier to see during the dry season... but I suspect that is true only of certain species. I’d been told the opposite when I had visited Thailand during the dry season! Perhaps because the questions I asked related only to the species I hadn’t seen, the answer might be expected….

Primates and squirrels were easiest to find in the very early morning (from just before dawn for the next two hours or so). The late afternoon was generally less good, and I tried to catch up on sleep most days after lunch, so don’t know much about mammal activity then. Spotlighting was fairly hit and miss: the abundance of animals was hard to predict or relate to the vagaries of weather or moon cycle. Heavy rain seemed to make the animals hard to find, but (and based on one night in particular) I found the hours immediately after heavy rain to be particularly productive for seeing stuff, especially along the road, along which I imagine some species may choose to travel to avoid the sopping wet forest.

In Borneo, most trips are only possible as tours, though I hired a car and travelled to Kinabalu and Poring on my own.

Sarawak

Mulu National Park, 2 nights - I stayed at the Park HQ, rather than the Royal Mulu resort, which was a good choice, because it was much more convenient for walking the trails around the park (after some negotiations with the park staff I was allowed to spotlight around the park on my own, so long as I registered my movements with security).

Deer Cave

The spectacular exit of 2 million Wrinkle-lipped Bats from Deer Cave, followed by some Naked Bats (larger with an audible echolocation) was a spectacle worth seeing. The long stretches of board-walk along the trail to Deer Cave, and the start of the trail up Mt Mulu made for excellent spotlighting potential because you could creep along silently. That said, I didn’t see a huge amount.

About 500 metres along the mountain trail I saw my first Moonrat, seemingly oblivious to the spotlight. I also saw a Leopard Cat going into Deer Cave at dusk. Inside the caves – apart from the Wrinkle-lipped Bats – I saw a few Diadem Roundleaf Bats, and several Bentwing spp (roosting in weep holes in the ceiling) in Lang Cave, and some Naked Bats flying around Deer Cave at dawn.  A Black Flying Squirrel was in the tree next to the security desk at Park HQ at about midnight.

The forest bordering the park is disputed territory between the government (who are busy logging it) and the local Berawan people who claim it as their own. I went out on a hunting expedition with some of the villagers who, for a small fee, were happy to take me spotlighting in the back of a Hi Lux so long as I didn’t mind them shooting most of what we saw (though they promised Sun Bears, Pangolins and Clouded Leopards were off the menu). The trip started well – in the first hour we saw 4 Small-toothed Palm Civets (two of which ended up in the back of the Ute), 5 Sunda Slow Lorises (not apparently good eating and left alive) and a Long-tailed Porcupine disappearing off the side of the road. But then a flat tyre, a flat spare and a broken foot pump (the seal of which was eventually replaced with the aid of a car mat, a knife and a candle) cut the trip short. The area sounds rich in mammals. One of the guys had seen a Pangolin the night before, and Tarsiers, Barking and Mouse Deer were apparently quite common.

Berawan 1: Small-toothed Palm Civet 0

Other species I saw around the park included a Myotis sp (flying circles under the bridge on the way to Deer Cave at 4 in the afternoon – a very dark bat, that was skimming the surface of the water), a couple of Treeshrews (but only fleeting glimpses at dawn), Plain Pygmy Squirrels (a couple along the short trail to the helipad from the bat viewing platform), the Sarawak subspecies of Prevost’s Squirrel (one at the very beginning of the Deer Cave trail) and a couple of small to medium fruit bats that I saw in flight and couldn’t id along with many microbats.

SABAH

Gunung Kinabalu, 2 nights - I needed more time here. It’s a fascinating area, and the walk up the mountain is something I want to return to do. During 36 hours at the Kinabalu HQ I saw quite a bit of stuff. Bornean Black-banded Squirrels were around the HQ. Other people have reported Red-bellied Sculptor Squirrels and Whitehead’s Pygmy Squirrel from the HQ and surrounding trails but I was disappointed not to see them (indeed on a 4 hour walk from 6am to 10am I only saw one squirrel and that was in the first 5 minutes).

Malayan Weasels seem relatively easy to see here, and I saw one at midday on the road up to the summit. Great animals, especially if the idea of a day-glo orange ferret gets you going.

About 50 metres before the Timphoon Gate at the end of the road up to the summit there’s a small skip (on the right hand side as you are going up). This attracted plenty of squirrels and treeshrews in the late afternoon (I saw Bornean Black-banded, and Mountain Ground Squirrels along with Mountain Treeshrews and a possible Slender Treeshrew here). Just before dusk a pair of Lesser Gymnures emerged from under the skip and after dark a pair of Giant Long-tailed Rats were foraging in the rubbish throughout the evening. A pair of Long-tailed Mountain Rats were raiding the smaller bins just before the locked gate up to the summit after dark.

Driving down the road at night I saw a Kinabalu Pit Viper (a spectacularly coloured snake and apparently pretty rare). I did a little spotlighting around the park HQ and saw a Masked Palm Civet in a fruiting fig. I also walked a few kms up the summit trail in the mid morning. The shelter stops on the way are a good place to see Squirrels. Jentinck’s Squirrels and Ground Squirrels were common at the first few shelters as were Tree Shrews. I was told that you had to walk a few kms further to see Kinabalu Squirrels easily and sadly I didn’t have time.

Mountain Treeshrew and Jentinck's Squirrel

Poring Hot Springs, 1 night - I only spent an evening and morning at Poring Hot Springs. From the sound of things it seems like a reasonably good place to see mammals, including Pangolins. Spotlighting for an hour or so around the base of the canopy walkway trail found a Smoky Flying Squirrel and three Greater Pencil-tailed Mice (running through the branches of various trees).  In the morning Prevost’s Squirrels were everywhere in that same area, along with one Plain Pygmy Squirrel. Three Cream Giant Squirrels were active towards the end of the canopy walkway.

I spent an hour at the bat cave (about a 20 minute walk from the HQ). Fawn Leaf-nosed Bats were the main species there, but there were also some Greater Sheathtail Bats (the identities of both species were confirmed by Mr Assim, the chief biologist at the park who was very helpful when I gave him a call).

Manukan Island, 1 night - I spent a night here because several websites reckoned there were Pangolins on this island just off Kota Kinabalu. A really cruisy place, with a spectacularly beautiful receptionist at the lodge, good food and OK snorkelling. But no Pangolins (as I suspected). Funny how these rumours start.


Sukau Rainforest Lodge, 2 nights - the Kinabatang River is a superb area for mammals. Most of the wildlife watching is done by boat: the long corridor of forest is so narrow that most of the animals have to be close to the river all of the time. I stayed at the Sukau Rainforest Lodge which was well run, with a nice patch of forest, complete with board walk, in their back yard. There was great mammal watching on the river and at the lodge.

Bornean Elephant & Pencil-tailed Tree Rat

Proboscis Monkeys are common along the river as are Long-tailed Macaques. Orang Utans are pretty easy to see too (most people see them if they stay for a couple of nights). Along the river I also saw Silvered Langurs (around the lodge feeding in a fig), Asian Elephants on the river trip in from Sandakan (seen less often), Sunda Pig-tailed Macaques, Bearded Pigs (common), and a Colugo (on a night cruise and unusual). Around the lodge there were Prevost’s Squirrels, Cream Giant Squirrels, Plain Pygmy Squirrels and a Horse-tailed Squirrel. From the boardwalk I watched a pair of Short-tailed Mongooses foraging at 11am, saw a Malayan Civet at about 8pm near the lodge, and a Moonrat at 7pm both evenings near the boardwalk. Giant and Island Flying Foxes were feeding in a fruit fig. There were Pencil-tailed Tree Rats and Rajah Rats around the place too (along with some nice birds – including a Storm Stork, and crocodiles and pythons). Highly recommended.

Proboscis Monkey & Orang Utan

Most trips to Sukau begin at Sandakan and a stop at the Sepilok Orang Utan orphanage/sanctuary. Wild Bornean Gibbons are here – but hard to see. Easier to see are Prevost’s Squirrels (the predominantly black Putonensis race) and Cream Giant Squirrels. They’ve also got a captive Sumatran Rhino that could only be visited in the mornings.

Danum Valley (2 nights in the Borneo Rainforest Lodge, 2 nights at the Danum Valley Field Centre) - the Borneo Rainforest Lodge is quite luxurious and expensive. I found it an irritating sort of place because of their many and peculiar regulations. They insist, for instance, that you walk the trails with a guide. Although there were only six of us staying there, I had to share a guide for half my trip which meant four of us were walking the trail together – not ideal for finding wildlife. Moreover, the other guide and his group was walking precisely the same trails at the same time as we were. I’ve no idea why. Though the Malaysians seem to like to do things en masse.

The standard night drive (included in the daily rate) lasts an hour or so and goes up the lodge drive to the gate and back. If you stay there you should be sure to arrange an extended night drive, though the price for this was very expensive at 150 ringit ($60) per person per hour (a figure a good deal higher than what was usually charged and seemed subject to some confusion). There was, however, a good deal of wildlife around and the BRL seems a much better place to see Clouded Leopards than the Field Centre.

Pygmy and Prevost’s Squirrels were common around the lodge, as were Bearded Pigs and both Greater and Lesser Mouse Deer. I saw several groups of Maroon Langurs along the trails, and heard Bornean Gibbons both mornings. I spent most of the daytime looking for Short-clawed Otters, also pretty common by the sound of things, but I couldn’t find any.

Mouse Deer & Canopy Walkway

The standard night drive picked up a Colugo, Malayan Civet, Small-toothed Palm Civet and a couple of Flying Squirrels (one Giant Red and one Thomas’s). On the second night I booked an extended night drive, and headed out just after several hours of torrential rain was stopping. This was one of the best night drives I’ve ever done. Five minutes up the road – in a large tree opposite the canopy walkway – we found a juvenile Bornean Clouded Leopard about 20 metres up in the fork of a tree. We watched it for 20 minutes but mum didn’t appear. Although these are reported fairly often here they are by no means common. It was only the second my guide had seen in 5 years.

Once we got onto the main logging road there was an animal every 500 metres: 10 Malayan Civets, several Small-toothed Palm Civets, a couple of Leopard Cats, a Masked Palm Civet, a couple of Flying Squirrels and a Long-tailed Porcupine. I imagine that the sopping wet forest meant the animals were choosing to travel along the road. I would have happily continued for several hours were it not for the exorbitant fee but my dilemma was solved when the bulb in the spotlight blew. Western Tarsiers are often reported from around here.

I set a few Elliot traps around near the lodge but didn't catch anything. Something however - and I am guessing a Sun Bear, given Orang Utans seldom descend to the ground - did terrible things to one of the traps.

The Danum Valley Field Centre is a much cheaper option and probably better for many of the mammals other than Clouded Leopard. They are fairly strict about who can stay there and most of the guests are visiting researchers. Bona fide naturalists are welcome however, though you need to book in advance. Night drives can be arranged here and the camp staff patrol throughout the night recording animals and I was welcomed when I asked to join them.

A Sun Bear had been hanging around for the past 6 months, occasionally raiding the kitchen bins, and rubbish by the hostel. It hadn’t been seen near camp for the a couple of weeks before my stay and I didn’t see it, though some people saw a Sun Bear in a tree only 1 km from camp while I was there. Other good animals reported reasonably regularly include Marbled Cat and Pangolin.

Danum fungus

In the early morning I saw an Orang Utan, Bornean Gibbons and Maroon Langurs along the nature trail. Bearded Pigs and Mouse Deer were common  near camp, as were Malayan Civets and Slow Lorises and the usual squirrels (Prevosts, Pygmy, Cream Giant and Horse-tailed). I didn’t see much on the night drive other than Red Giant Flying Squirrels and a Leopard Cat.

On my last morning I helped a researcher check his traps for Treeshrews. He’d caught a Plain Treeshrew (Tupaia longipes) [a recent split from the Common Treeshrew (T. glis) that isn’t found in Borneo] and a Large Treeshrew (T. tana). It was good to get a decent look at these usually fleeting animals.

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