The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Less than 800 Sunda clouded leopards in Sabah

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KOTA KINABALU: A recent study published in the scientific journal Oryx has produced the first robust estimate of the number of Sunda clouded leopards remaining Sabah, and explored how changes to the state’s forest landscape may be affecting these threatened wild cats.

The study, led by researcher­s from WildCRU (University of Oxford, UK), in collaborat­ion with partners from Universiti Malaysia Sabah, Danau Girang Field Centre, Sabah Wildlife Department and Panthera provided the first evidence that the population density of the Sunda clouded leopard is negatively affected by hunting pressure and forest fragmentat­ion. They also showed that time since logging among selectivel­y logged forests is positively associated with abundance.

This research was primarily funded by the Darwin Initiative, Recanati-Kaplan Foundation, Robertson Foundation and Sime Darby Foundation.

“For six years, we conducted intensive camera-trap surveys of eight protected areas in Sabah,” said Dr Andrew Hearn from WildCRU, first author of the paper.

“We used the cloud shaped markings on the coat of the animal and morphology to identify and sex individual animals and used sophistica­ted statistica­l methods to estimate their density in these different forest areas across Sabah. We also analysed our camera trap data to provide an estimate of poaching pressure for each study area,” added Hearn.

“We found evidence of poaching activity in all forest areas with the lowest detection rates being in Danum and the highest in Kinabatang­an. We finally estimated the size of the population of the Sunda clouded leopard to be around 750 individual­s in Sabah.”

Professor David Macdonald, director of the WildCRU at Oxford, said: “Clouded leopards are stunningly beautiful, and as denizens of some of the most threatened forests in the world they have the potential to be iconic symbols for conservati­on: our findings are a big step on that road.”

Luke Hunter, the President and Chief Conservati­on Officer of Panthera said: “The clouded leopard is the top cat of Sabah, playing a similar role as tigers or leopards in continenta­l Asia. Sadly, just as tigers and leopards elsewhere, clouded leopards are targeted by poachers. Our work emphasizes yet again how saving big cats and their prey relies on strong protection and robust antipoachi­ng measures.”

DGFC director Dr Benoit Goossens, a co-author on the study, said he hopes that the results of this paper together with the action plan for the Sunda clouded leopard that is currently being drafted and should be launched early 2018, will help manage the species in Sabah’s forests.

“The fact that selectivel­y logged forests provide an important resource for Sunda clouded leopards suggest that appropriat­e management of these commercial forests could further enhance their conservati­on value,” added Goossens.

“But the overriding priority for our wildlife managers is to reduce poaching pressure, both on these fields and their prey, by reducing access to the forest interior along logging road."

 ??  ?? Camera trap picture of a Sunda clouded leopard in the Ulu Segama Forest Reserve. - Picture courtesy of A.J Hearn & J. Ross
Camera trap picture of a Sunda clouded leopard in the Ulu Segama Forest Reserve. - Picture courtesy of A.J Hearn & J. Ross

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