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GWR
02-12-07, 09:17 PM
007/12/02
Rare sighting of the Sumatran rhinoceros
By : Elizabeth John

http://www.nst.com.my/Sunday/National/2098926/insidepix1
[Photo: NST - This partial picture of a rhino’s hind leg (inset) was captured by camera traps on the main range. Though just a fleeting glimpse, it has raised hopes that the critically endangered Sumatran rhinoceros still roam the jungles of Peninsular Malaysia. —Pictures courtesy of Wildlife and National Parks Department.]

KUALA LUMPUR: The skin's coarse, folded and wrinkled but this flash of thigh has some hearts in the wildlife fraternity racing.

http://www.nst.com.my/Sunday/National/2098926/insidepix2?display=xsmall
[Photo: NST - This gaur was photographed at a very high elevation during the survey. The ox-like animal usually roams the lowland forests. It is listed as ‘vulnerable’ on the World Conservation Union’s (IUCN) Red List of threatened species, which means it faces a high risk of extinction in the medium-term future.]

http://www.nst.com.my/Sunday/National/2098926/insidepix3?display=xsmall
[Photo: NST - The tapir is a totally protected animal in Malaysia. A number were captured on camera in the department’s survey.]

It belongs to the elusive and critically endangered Sumatran rhinoceros.

Although just a fleeting glimpse of skin, it is the first ever camera trap image of the animal in Peninsular Malaysia.

Rhino footprints were last found in Johor in 2001 but the animal was never spotted.

One stray rhino was captured in 1994 when it wandered out of a forest in Perak but elsewhere, the animal has not been sighted in the wild here since the mid 1990s.
Rhinos were long thought to be on the path to extinction in the peninsula, but the slightly hazy snapshot retrieved from camera traps on the main range has raised hope that there are still some in the wild.

The Wildlife and National Parks Department's eight cameras, camouflaged and strapped to trees, also shot dozens of other animals passing through a 10-square metre clearing.

It turned out to be a wildlife highway of sorts as the cameras snapped pictures of elephants, sun bears, tapir and even the rarely photographed gaur.

But it was the picture of grey-brown folds that stood out among the hundreds of others taken.

It was later compared to old close-up shots of rhinos previously held in captivity and verified by the department's veterinarians as that of the rhino.

The department was first led to the area when an inventory team surveying the main range discovered fresh footprints, a wallow and bones of a long-dead rhino, explained Siti Hawa Yatim who is head of the the department's Biodiversity Conservation Division.

In August, officers set up the cameras that were left in the area for one to three months.

The results showed just how rich the area was with wildlife.

Apart from the small area covered by the cameras, the department surveyed a forested area almost six times the size of Singapore.

This resulted in the recording of 852 animal signs of 17 mammal species.

The most frequently recorded were elephants, wild boar and white-handed gibbons.

Right now, several surveys are being carried out in protected areas in Perak, Pahang, Kelantan, Terengganu and Kedah.

"We're going back to areas where the rhinos were once recorded, looking for more signs and taking samples.

"We are also looking for doomed animals -- individuals alone in a vast area which cannot survive without companions."

As a result of the photo, the department is sending more people to the area and setting up extra camera traps.

The idea, according to Siti Hawa, is to establish the numbers and to decide, what steps, if any, should be taken to protect them.

"There is concern for their safety as there is logging being carried out near the area the photograph was taken."

Next year, the department will mobilise all the Rhino Protection Units which it set up in 1995 and will be buying and setting up more camera traps.

"We're hoping that there'll be more finds."

The department has also recently acquired the technique of extracting DNA from dung samples.

Once survey teams return with samples of rhino dung, they will be able to conduct the tests and compare them to rhino DNA in international databases for a final confirmation.

Siti Hawa said the department had made this a priority project.
http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Sunday/National/2098926/Article/index_html

Stephen Cleary
03-12-07, 10:13 AM
Slendid news!

Does anyone know of when the last wild rhinoceros was spotted and actually photographed in Thailand?

GWR
14-06-08, 09:27 PM
Saturday June 14, 2008
Giant footprints ‘found’ in Sarawak village, say reports

http://thestar.com.my/archives/2008/6/14/nation/n_14bigfoot.jpg
[Photo: The Star - Puzzling discovery: One of the footprints measuring 120cm from heel to toe that was found in Daro, Sarawak. - Bernama]

SIBU: Is Big Foot in Sarawak? That’s the question now on everyone's lips following the discovery of a pair of giant footprints in a Melanau village in Daro in the Mukah Division, about three hours by express boat from here.

The Borneo Post English daily and its sister Chinese language newspaper See Hua Daily News reported the find – footprints measuring almost 120cm from heel to toe and 43cm from side to side, on their front pages yesterday.

They reported that a local businessman, Tan Soon Kuang, had claimed to have seen the footprints at the village which he declined to identify at the request of the villagers.

“They are clearly too gigantic to belong to any normal human being,” he was quoted as saying.

Tan also said that the villagers had mixed feelings about the discovery.

Some were curious while others were scared, he said.

Nevertheless, he said, the villagers had cleared a footpath leading to the footprints in anticipation of more visitors over the weekend.

It would be “tough for a person to create such marks on the hard ground”, said Tan.

A civil servant, who requested anonymity, said that he had seen the footprints but admitted that it was hard to say whether they were genuine without any scientific exploration.

He said many people had been visiting the village in the past few days to see the footprints.

He also said that in the olden days, the area was used by certain people for solitary meditation in the hope of getting whatever they desired from divine beings.

Jemoreng state assemblyman Abu Seman Jahwie said that he had yet to see the footprints although he had heard of the discovery.

Malaysians were in the grip of Big Foot mania about three years ago after several people claimed to have seen a Big Foot family which had left footprints measuring up to 45cm long in a forested area in Johor. – Bernama
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2008/6/14/nation/21550343&sec=nation

http://www.theborneopost.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/00004473.jpg
[Photo: NST - Courtesy Borneo Post Online - HUGE: Local community leader Pemanca Tan Poh Kuan is among those who visited the site to take a closer look at the mysterious footprints.]

http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Friday/NewsBreak/20080613170100/Article/index_html

‘Bigfoot’ was here!
By Gaing Kunding, Raymond Tan and Conny Banji

Villagers have no explanation for giant footprints but businessman says proof is in the pudding

http://www.theborneopost.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/00004472.jpg
[All Photos: Borneo Post Online - DARO: Villagers here are reeling from the shock of discovering two extra large footprints near the fence of a nearby orchard.]

They probably resembled those mentioned many times in foreign reports in claims of sightings of the mysterious ‘Bigfoot’.

The shocker has been spreading like wildfire in Daro district for the past few days and among those drawn to the phenomenon was local businessman Tan Soon Kuang.

(According to Wikipedia, Bigfoot is one of the more famous creatures in cryptozoology, and, like many cryptids around the world, there is a fierce debate as to whether the Bigfoot species exists or not. Cryptozoologist John Willison Green has postulated that Bigfoot is a worldwide phenomenon.)

Yesterday, Tan, 42, e-mailed the images of the mysterious creature’s footprints. He said he personally went to the village (which he refused to name out of respect for the wishes of the locals) to check on the truth of the story.

“The truth is in the photographs that I have taken with my camera,” he told The Borneo Post in a telephone interview yesterday.

According to him, each footprint measures 47 inches from heel to toe and 17 inches sideways “clearly too gigantic for any normal human being”.

Asked when and how he went to the village and took the photos, Tan answered: “I went there last Wednesday, June 11 after I heard about the news.

“I drove about five minutes from Daro town to the village. Then, I walked on foot along a footpath for quite a few minutes to the place where I met many villagers who were gathered there.

“Then some villagers pointed to the big footprints.

I was shocked to see them and excited as I took those photographs.”

On his conversation with the villagers, he said: “When I asked the villagers the first time they discovered the two big footprints, they told me it was June 9.

“They also told me they now recall that before they came across the footprints, the villagers had, a few months ago felt uncomfortable and sick as if there was something ‘unclean’ in the air.

“They said they decided to look for a ‘bomoh’ (medicine man) who told them to go to an area, dig a small hole, then build a fence around it.

http://www.theborneopost.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/00004476.jpg
[SHOCKING FIND: Picture shows a group of boys gathering around the right footprint which measures 47 inches by 17 inches.]

The bomoh further told them to make offerings outside the area fenced.

“And then last Monday morning the villagers saw the two big footprints outside the fenced up area.”

Tan further said: “When I asked the villagers if they were afraid or not they told me some were afraid; other just curious. But all of them apparently believe that the place was ‘unclean’.

“The villagers are now clearing up the footpath leading to the large footprints in anticipation of more people coming to have a look at the footprints.

“The villagers also told me that it was not the first time that they saw such mysterious big footprints in their village. In fact, the first time they saw such big footprints was about 50 years ago.”

Asked if there is any possibility that the footprints were man-made, Tan said it would be a tough act for a person to create such a mark on the hard ground.

Jemoreng assemblyman Abu Seman Jahwie when contacted yesterday said he heard about such discovery somewhere in a village in Daro area.

Asked if thinks it is real, he replied: “Sorry, I can’t say. It could be just rumours. I have not been to the place. I am now in Matu.”

http://www.theborneopost.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/00004475.jpg
[BIGFOOT TRAIL: A girl points to the two big footprints circled in yellow. The distance between the left footprint (foreground) and right footprint speaks volume of the size of ‘Bigfoot’. — Photos courtesy of Tan Soon Kuang]

The story has spread to Sibu where Abdul Aziz Pung, who is very familiar with Daro, said he had heard about the footprints from friends and relatives.

“Yes, they said it is true. Initially I laughed it off, but then some of my friends who came down to Sibu town convinced me that they are real. I may be going there soon to see them for myself.”

Meanwhile, a Daro villager who spoke on anonymity, said the villagers stumbled upon the footprints not far from the village that was once attacked by monkeys. This episode was reported by The Borneo Post some months ago.

According to him, many villagers believe that the monkeys had run out of their jungle habitat to escape from ‘Bigfoot’.
http://www.theborneopost.com/?p=36789