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Tags
  • boundary
  • camera trap
  • camera traps
  • community development
  • ecosystem restoration
  • film
  • forest
  • Hagen's Pit Viper
  • Harapan Rainforest
  • Helarctos malayanus
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Tagged Content List
  • Blog post: Snakes alive!

    Elva Gemita
    There have been a couple of new snake identifications in Harapan. They are both pit vipers, Hagen’s Pit Viper Trimeresurus hageni and Wagler’s Pit Viper Tropidolaemus wagleri (shown in the photo). They have “pits” between their eyes and nostrils. These pits contain infrared sensors...
    on26 Aug 2011
  • Blog post: Stephanie spotted it!

    Ian Rowland
    Stephanie Sim from RSPB Northern Ireland is in Harapan Rainforest for a month. She's supporting the team there with the expertise she normally uses back home in Belfast - public affairs and media. Steph is recording her impressions and we’ll pass those on to you. As with most visitors to the...
    on15 Jul 2011
  • Blog post: Tracking the number of tiger tracks we've tracked

    Kim Worm Sorensen
    Harapan’s patrol wardens, all local community members, are one of our greatest assets. In the field all day, every day, they have the most contact with the forest’s wildlife. Discovering what they encounter is vital for learning how wildlife uses the forest. The wardens were recently trained...
    on3 Jun 2011
  • Blog post: Oh my! What big teeth you have!

    Elva Gemita
    It’s a macaque, and those teeth are very big. What more is there to say? Just enjoy the fantastic photo. Think how, if it wasn’t for Harapan Rainforest, this might not exist.
    on22 Apr 2011
  • Blog post: Collecting seeds, collecting hope

    Djoko P
    A steady supply of seed is vital for forest restoration, so there are always seedlings to be planted out. Recently, three of us from the nursery team headed into the forest to collect bilakang seeds. As we headed out along the trail, our eyes didn’t stop scanning the forest floor – many seeds...
    on25 Feb 2011
  • Blog post: This is how committed we are to restoring Harapan Rainforest

    Elva Gemita
    We know that the animals and birds in Harapan Rainforest are important for moving seeds around the forest. Hornbills fly for miles across the forest canopy, taking with them the seeds of fruit they have eaten. We want to find out which animals and birds eat what types of seed. This will help us as we...
    on11 Feb 2011
  • Blog post: Look what I've found!

    Urip Wiharjo
    Three of Harapan Rainforest’s forestry team and five staff from Sarolangun district forestry service recently went to Harapan Rainforest’s western border with Taman Bandung village, to conduct a boundary survey. They found good quality forest with a high density of trees and very good canopy...
    on28 Jan 2011
  • Blog post: Research shows 550 sunbears in Harapan Rainforest

    vicki powell
    We have just completed our first Malayan Sun Bear research project, funded by the International Bear Association. The sun bear is the smallest bear in the world and one of the globally threatened mammals found in Harapan Rainforest. It gets its name from the golden disc of fur on its chest. Its name...
    on10 Sep 2010
  • Blog post: Harapan Rainforest through the lens

    Samsul Rizal
    A film crew recently visited Harapan Rainforest to make a film. I was lucky to join them to learn about making the exciting conservation films we see on television or the internet. We spent the first few days with the Bathin Sembilan indigenous community; filming their daily lives and seeing how important...
    on25 Jun 2010
  • Blog post: Pangolins saved from traditional medicine trade released in Harapan Rainforest

    vicki powell
    The pangolin is a strange looking mammal; scaly, with a prehensile tail, and claws for opening termite mounds. I never thought I’d see one of these secretive animals in the wild. I got my first encounter last week in sad circumstances, and not just one but 40 of them! The governement wildlife...
    on11 Jun 2010
  • Blog post: Tiptoeing through tiger territory

    jeri imansyah
    One of the most amazing things about working in a tropical forest is the ever-present thrill of what I might encounter next. On our last field trip, myself and our six research assistants woke up just before dawn to the unmistakable, deep resonating growl of a tiger, less than 200m from our tents. It...
    on2 Apr 2010
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