Description
The machinations of fate have converged our paths upon the tip of the third largest island in the world — the state of Sabah on Malaysian Borneo. A mysterious place seemingly untouched by the age of globalisation and, for the uninitiated, one which can still conjure up wild images of impenetrable rainforests, impassable mountain ranges, undiscovered head-hunting tribes and a diversity of weird and untamed animals beyond one’s most vivid imagination.
Travelling along the water highways of the major rivers and estuaries in Sabah, one is bound to be drawn to the unmistakable sights of little orange visages breaking through the monotonous green and brown of the forest fabric, and the boisterous “honks” and “growls” awakening the tranquillity of the forest silence. This is what brought us together on this common journey of discovery, an animal that astounded early explorers and which still fascinates many today — one that is “amazingly wonderful”, yet “highly ludicrous” and “amazingly grotesque” — the proboscis monkey.
Table of Contents
- Foreword vi
- Introduction 1
- Sabah: its forests, diversity and people 9
- Studying the proboscis monkeys 21
- Proboscis monkeys and their habitats 27
- Distribution of proboscis monkeys 35
- Activity and behavior 41
- Social organisation 47
- Feeding ecology 57
- Ranging behaviour 67
- Natural predation 73
- Threats to proboscis monkeys 79
- Conservation of proboscis monkeys 87
- Ecotourism 99
- Bibliography 107
- Glossary 120
- Acknowledgements 125
- Photo Credits 125
- About the Authors 126