Showing posts with label Sabah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sabah. Show all posts

Friday, April 23, 2010

123 New Species Discovered in Heart Of Borneo

The pristine rainforests of Central Borneo.

For centuries, Borneo has captured the fascination of explorers and naturalists from all over the world. Alfred Russel Wallace, one of the prominent Naturalist of his time, described "my pleasure was increased as I daily got numbers of species, and many genera which I had not met with before" during his stay in Sarawak in 1855.

The increasingly well-known, species rich Maliau Basin in Central Sabah, Northern Borneo.

Centuries on, as a continuing testimonial to the biodiversity of Borneo, an astounding 123 new species has been found in the deep forests of Borneo stretching 220,000km square across three countries namely Brunei, Indonesia (Kalimantan) and Malaysia (Sabah and Sarawak states) in the short time span of 3 years.

One of the many rivers that made up Borneo's important wetlands, leading people to term Borneo as "The Amazon of Southeast Asia"

The discoveries range from the giant half-metre long Chan's Stick Insect (Phobaeticus chanii) to Kopstein's Bronzeback Snake (Dendrelaphis kopsteini) , from rare wild orchid (Thrixspermum erythrolomum) to colour changing flying frogs (Rhacophorus penanorum) , Lungless frog (Barbourula kalimantanensis) to Freshwater prawns (Macrobrachium kelianense) and many other amazing creatures. (click this link for more info)

Tall dipterocarp forests spread over much of the remaining lowland primary forests of Borneo. Shown here is the Sepilok Orang Utan Sanctuary's forest canopy.

Among the discoveries is the mollusc-Ibycus rachelae, a long tailed slug found in the mist covered, montane forests of Mount Kinabalu and described by Menno Schilthuizen and Liew Thor-Seng. It has a peculiar calcium-carbonate-made-love dart which penetrates its mate partner during courtship and injects hormones to "seduce" its mate and increase reproduction chances. Easy to romanticise and entitle this slug to be named "the real cupid"!

Logging roads criss-crossing the terrain in Northern Borneo. This activity, along with expanding oil palm plantations, are among the many threats this biodiversity hotspot faces.

Borneo is indeed crawling with new wildlife and plants waiting to be discovered. Who knows, every daily stroll in the Borneo forest will produce several new to science creatures and plants? This is really a place worth exploring!

A sparkling, intricately shaped spider's web under the tropical sun rays filtered by the canopy foliage. One of the many natural wonders found in Borneo.

There is definitely something to explore and discover in the depths of this surprising Bornean Rainforest!

For articles about the new discoveries, check these links out:
1. Borneo's New World: New Species Discovered in the Heart of Borneo. WWF Report, 2010. (click here)

2. Heart of Borneo emerges as home of world's longest insect, lungless frog and "ninja" slug, WWF News, 2010. (click here)

Learn more about the Heart of Borneo Project, see:
1. WWF's Heart of Borneo Forests webpage.(click here)

2. WWF-Malaysia's Heart of Borneo-Three Countries, One Conservation Vision webpage.

3. The heart of Borneo Resources-Student support site.(click here)

4. Fast disappearing "Heart of Borneo" is likely Home to Thousands of Species still Undiscovered. WWF Press Release, 2005.(click here)

Reference for the Ibycus rachelae slug:
1.Schiltuizen & Liew, 2008. The slugs and semislugs of Sabah, Malaysian Borneo (Gastropoda, Pulmonata: Veronicellidae, Rathouisiidae, Ariophantidae, Limacinidae, Philomycidae). BASTERIA, 72: 287-306

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Pulau Sipadan: The Story So Far

Pulau Sipadan- Jewel of the Celebes Sea

It has amazed thousands of visitors around the world with its serene coral reefs and profusion of marine biodiversity beyond imagination ever since renowned aquatic explorer,
Jacques Cousteau first penetrated into its depths in awe and wonder that is reflected in his well-versed quote- "I have seen no other places like Sipadan, 45 years ago, but now no more. Now we have found an untouched piece of art" during his expedition across the Sulu-Celebes Sea. Superlative descriptions have been a common "trademark" for Pulau Sipadan. Everyone who have visited this 12 hectares island carry their own accounts of adventures, each as amazing as the other. However, underlying all these colourful stories is one that many have not ventured into yet, a story that is as grand as its coral reefs - The Story of the Evolution of Pulau Sipadan into the island we know today.

Semporna town near Pulau Sipadan. The flatland across the shallow strait is Pulau Bum Bum and the tall imposing peaks behind it is Pulau Gaya and Pulau Boheydulang.

Beyond the acknowledgement of Pulau Sipadan as a oceanic, volcanic sea mount in tourists brochures, little else about its origin is mentioned. So, to fill this information gap that some visitors (including me) may wonder about, I've done a small online research to analyse and share this particular island's history with everyone. The following may not be a complete description of the island's formation but nevertheless, it sheds some light to this legendary island's origins.

To fully understand the geological history of Pulau Sipadan, we have to look at the bigger picture that is Sabah, the continental tip of Northern Borneo. Turning the clock back to more than 65 million years ago, much of North Borneo was submerged under deep waters. As the Tertiary period (65 million - 2.588 million years ago) begins, the first lands can be seen breaking the cerulean waters in the form of a chain of islands that resembles much more of a growing underwater mountain range of what is now the tallest in Borneo- the Crocker Range. As time progresses, clouds bringing storms and rains washed the slopes of these majestic mountain-islands, thus distributing alluvial deposits along the coast until these islands became linked.


Mount Kinabalu, at 4095m, is the tallest peak in Crocker Range at present day.


Kinabatangan Delta of present day Borneo gives us a glimpse of what Central Borneo used to be like.

The Eurasian Plate is where the Sundaland (the shallow, light blue area) is. The Philippine plate can be seen as a dark (deep) area off Northeastern Borneo.

The movement of Philippine plate against the Eurasian plate north of Sabah further pushes the mountain range higher and higher while creating a wide floodplain to the east with soil runoff from the highlands during the Miocene period (23.03 - 5.33 million years ago). Meanwhile, the same Philippine plate in the southeastern end of North Borneo starts to drift apart from the Eurasian "mainland", causing a rift and sets off the red hot lava bursting out of the cracked Earth crust from the deep magma below. Soon, the deep seas off the developing floodplains east of Crocker Range (now Central Sabah) were boiling hot with lava and pumice bursting out of the surface all the time. This will soon form most of Eastern Sabah, in which the Semporna Peninsula will emerge from the thick clouds of volcanic ashes.

Remains of ancient volcanoes in Tawau, west of Semporna.

Volcanic rocks of Tawau indicates the region was once highly active in volcanic activity.


Low tides exposes ancient volcanic pumice and rock deposits (dark brown areas) along mainland Semporna and Pulau Bum Bum.

Across the 100m tall developing volcanic cones along Semporna Peninsula, ashes spews and radiate out into the ocean and the ancient floodplains of Central Sabah, joining nearby islands and expanding its landmass. However, further out in the deep ocean off the edge of Eurasian Plate, an undersea volcano far removed from the bustling volcanic activity miles from it, silently build in height. Forwarding the frame in a year per second, one would see steam rising out from the deep Celebes Sea and then, a dark mass of rock and pumice pops out of the surface and extends in width and height. Pulau Sipadan is born. Since it is separated from mainland Semporna by deep waters, the lowland sediments of Semporna never made it to Sipadan.

Volcanic rocks exposed on Pulau Menampilik off Semporna.

The chain of islands off Southeastern Semporna with prominent exposed volcanic rocks.

Sometime later, the lava flows and plumes disappeared and volcanoes silenced. Clumps of greenery previously existed only in areas of least volcanic activity flourished and spreaded across the landscape. Gradually, the dark rocks of past ages got smothered in rainforests and mangroves, only occasionally protruding as hardened lava cones at higher peaks. Ashes not covered by vegetation end up being washed away by rains and wave action of the sea. As time progresses, the ice age of the Holocene (approximately 12000 years ago) arrives. As if a plug in a basin of seawater is being pulled, sea levels bordering the peninsula dramatically retreated 120m below sea level. Thus, "raising" the badly worn volcanic peaks of Semporna some 100m above that era's shoreline. Across the narrow band of water, Sipadan stood as a lonely, weathered and extinct volcano draped in lush forests on its slopes and coastal grasslands along it's coasts. During this time, some ancient fauna and flora might have migrated to the island through the deep but short passage of sea. There may be corals fringing the ancient coast as well.


Fertile soils encourage rapid growth of rainforests across the volcanic slopes of the mountains on mainland Semporna.

Manado Tua of North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Pulau Sipadan was once similar in appearance to this island when it was a volcanic mountain island many millenia ago.

Bukit Tengkorak with a volcanic outcrop, near Semporna town. The sign of an ancient volcanic land.

Fertile lands on the southeastern tip of Semporna Peninsula is the testimony of the volcanoes around the area.

Corals are the building blocks of Sipadan's limestone.

Approaching 6000 years before present day, the ending of ice age marked another dramatic event- the increase in sea level or mass-flooding. Once again, lowlands shrinked and forests of the past disappeared below the waves. The seawater soon reached present day levels at 6070 years before present, only to exceed another tenths of metres of height for the following millenia. Thus, the cone became completely submerged. Corals started to form at the top most part of the seamount, growing outwards slightly below sea level. Before long, the sea levels retreated again, exposing the limestone reefs to the atmosphere and creating habitat for forest recolonisation. During this period of emergence, parts of the limestone eroded to form a complex cave system complete with stalactites and stalagmites which will be known as the Turtles' Tomb or Cave due to the high numbers of unfortunate turtles trapped and died in the labyrinths of this cave. What happens next will define Sipadan's present day characteristics.

Coral-fringe islands is now part of Semporna's modern feature after the sea level rise.

The island chain in the foreground used to be high and dry with grasslands dominating valleys between them and the sea as well as mainland Semporna (background).

During the exposure of limestone, this may be what Sipadan looked like. Picture taken in Nusa Penida, Bali, Indonesia, an island made of raised coral limestone.

The submerged cave entrance to Turtle's Tomb.

Crevices like these may be the access routes to caves lying deep inside Sipadan limestone.

Being on a mobile, active edge of the Philippine plate, it so happened that Sipadan slides along the growing tectonic plate and the limestone forest began to submerged again, probably eliminating the terrestrial ecosystem all together. Then, polyps of modern corals settled on the ready-made reefs of craggy limestone to expand as a reef and form the strange shape of a "mushroom" along the top perimeter of the seamount. Up above water, the reefs slowly give way to a sand bank which accumulates and grows as time passes. Birds and storms bring driftwood, sea beans, plants and animals to colonise the sandy island. Finally, the ecosystem of coastal forests and coral reefs reached their climax that is Pulau Sipadan today.

The sand bar formed near Semporna show what modern Sipadan was like in the initial stages of development.

As sand accumulates, the land mass increases and vegetation flourishes as shown here in Pulau Mabul, near Sipadan.

Driftwood washed up by storms brings in many flora and fauna from nearby terrestrial ecosystems.

The product of millenia of colonisation by terrestrial flora and fauna- the dense coastal forest of Pulau Sipadan.

The famous vertical drop off of Sipadan. Could this be the upper part of the "mushroom" structure?

Diving along the ancient limestone cliff.

Sipadan today as seen from above (Google Earth).
Indeed, Pulau Sipadan has gone a long way since becoming a little lava-spewing bump at the edge of the Philippine Shelf and Eurasian Plate to the grandeur of today. Not surprisingly, the story of this tiny island in the Celebes Sea does not end here. Maybe Sipadan is going to expand its landmass? Or rather swept below the waves by climate change induced sea level rise? Or, as some joked, topple over into the abyss of the Celebes due to excessive pressure on the seamount by the "mushroom" coral limestone? (Note: The last theory is mend to be, well, a joke!)


Reference:
1.Charles S. Hutchison, 2006 The Unique Geology of Sabah (North Borneo). University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur. (click here)

2. JED Fox. General Geology of Sabah (excerpt). Sabah Forestry Department. (click here)

3.Intercoastal Zone Management Project, 1998. Sabah Coastal Zone Profile. Town & Regional Planning Department Sabah. (click here)

4.Allagu Ballaguru and Gary Nichols, 2003. Tertiary stratigraphy and basin evolution, southern Sabah (Malaysian Borneo). Journal of Asian Earth Sciences V. 23, Iss. 4: 537-554

5.Mohd Harun Abdullah, Mazlin B. Mokhtar, Sanudin Hj. Tahir and Almah Bt.
Awaluddin, 1997. Do Tides Affect Water Quality in the Upper Phreatic Zone of a Small Oceanic Island – Sipadan Island, Malaysia? Environmental Geology 29(1/2):112-117

6.Ahmad Zaharin Aris, Mohd Harun Abdullah, Kim Kyoung Woong, 2006. Hydrochemical Analysis on seawater intrusion of small carbonate islands: Manukan and Sipadan, Sabah. Proceedings of the 2nd Southeast Asian Natural resources and Environmental Management Conference, kota Kinabalu, Nov. 21-23, 2006, pp.40-44



Friday, May 1, 2009

Snailing Sipadan and Mabul

Well known as a world class diving destination, Sipadan Island and it's neighbour, Mabul Island also hold some interesting topside flora and fauna, including a hoard of new-to-science snails.
Mabul Island
- A heavily developed island north of Sipadan. Most of the greenery on the island are coconut palms planted by native Bajau and Suluk people. The only remaining original forest,less than 2 acres, lies in the East side of the island. This narrow strip of forest has a wide path cutting through it the centre and is surrounded by worker's quarters and storage rooms of a nearby resort. Apparently, it lies it the property of the resort itself. I found 3 unidentified molluscs here:


Obba cf. marginata- Found dead in a cleared area near the forest. I tried to find live ones in the forest but couldn't. It resembles Obba marginata from Mindanao,Southern Philippines.




Videna sp.- Because there is no proper study to sort out the various species of this genus, the shell's identification couldn't be ascertained. But recent studies shows that this genus does exists in the Semporna archipelago.



Amphidromus sp.- An abundance of dead specimens were discovered around the coconut plantations and resorts. The broken shell on the left shows the original colouration. No live snails found.






Sipadan Island- Relatively untouched by resort development due to strict management rules and it's status as a marine sanctuary. Other than several abandoned chalets in the North, this island is densely covered with coastal forest vegetation. There are lots of hermit crabs, skinks and clouded monitor lizards (Varanus bengalensis nebulosus). Lucky visitors might be able to see the endangered nicobar pigeon (Caloenas nicobarica)as well as the rare ground dwelling megapode bird(Megapodius cummingii).The biodiversity here is intact. It also supports a healthy population of molluscs:

Pythia scarabaeus- Abundant amongst trees trunks, stems, fallen leaves etc. A widespread species throughout Southeast Asia's coasts.







Amphidromus sp.- Found living on pandanus sp. trees' aerial roots. It has a zigzag patterned periotracum. Different from Mabul Island's amphidromus as it has less whorls than Mabul's. Possible endemic species.





Both islands illustrates the diversity of the region as well as it's problems vividly. Mabul has lost most of it's diversity due to over development whereas Sipadan shows the success of the sanctuary's strict laws of conservation. They also revealed the undiscovered molluscan fauna of the Semporna archipelago. The new discoveries beckons......