MALAYSIA

Expanding a Key Tiger Stronghold in Malaysia

Project Cost: $2,265,929

Funding Raised: $2,265,929

$10.43 per acre (1 acre = 43,560 sq ft)
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2X The Impact

Thanks to generous support from our donors, we have successfully reached our fundraising goal for this project.

Estimated at more than 130 million years old, the last major stand of lowland dipterocarp forest on the Malay Peninsula lies within and adjacent to Taman Negara National Park, making this one of the most important protected areas in Southeast Asia. This park and surrounding landscape are home to a globally significant tiger population in addition to other threatened species such as Sunda Pangolins, Asian Elephants, Asian Tapirs, Dholes and White-handed Gibbons.

A large tract of forest adjacent to the national park remains totally unprotected and at risk from logging and conversion to rubber plantations. This is one of the last few places on mainland Southeast Asia where forming new protected areas is possible, as the majority of forests are already converted to oil palm plantations or have been given protected status.

Rainforest Trust and local partner Rimba seek $2,265,930 to secure nearly 217,251 acres of unprotected forest connected to Taman Negara National Park, with an additional 31,676 acres upgraded to state park status. Our local partner suggests naming the new proposed protected area, encompassing 248,927 acres, Kenyir State Park. The site lies within a globally important Tiger Conservation Landscape and is a critical wildlife corridor in the Malaysian Central Forest Spine Master Plan for Ecological Linkages.

Fast Facts

Location:
Terengganu, Malaysia

Size:
248,927 acres (217,251 acres as a new declaration, 31,676 acres upgraded to state park status)

Key Species (Based on IUCN Red List):
Malayan Tiger (CR), Sunda Pangolin (CR), Helmeted Hornbill (CR), Asian Elephant (EN), Asian Tapir (EN), Dhole (EN), White-handed Gibbon (EN), Straw-headed Bulbul (EN), Yellow-breasted Bunting (EN)

Habitat:
Lowland dipterocarp forest

Threats:
Habitat loss due to logging, poaching

Action:
Designate 217,251 acres as a new protected area, upgrade 31,676 acres to state park status

Local Partner:
Rimba

Financial Need:
$2,265,930

Price per Acre:
$10.43

Total Carbon Storage (Mt CO2):
41,182,517

Biodiversity

The proposed protected area contains some of the highest species richness in Asia. This lowland and foothill dipterocarp forest is home to at least 43 mammal species, 18 of which are highly threatened.

Six of Malaysia’s eight wild cat species prowl these forests, including the Malayan Tiger, a Critically Endangered subspecies. These apex predators face tremendous pressure from poaching, fuelled by the illegal trade of their pelts and bones used in traditional medicine, and there are less than 250 mature individuals estimated to remain in peninsular Malaysia. Other mammals in this area include Critically Endangered Sunda Pangolins and Endangered species such as Asian Elephants, Asian Tapirs, Dholes and White-handed Gibbons. Incredibly, more than 290 bird species have been documented in this area, 66 of which are assessed on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. This includes nine hornbill species such as the Great and the Rhinoceros Hornbills, making this area one of the richest places in Southeast Asia for these magnificent birds. In addition, the region is home to two species of the world’s largest flower, the Rafflesia.

Challenges

The main threats to the area are logging, poaching and conversion to rubber plantations.

The proposed protected area currently consists entirely of logging concessions, for which licenses may be issued at any time. It is urgent that this area be secured for conservation, as logging would degrade vital tiger habitat, expand access for poachers due to the creation of logging roads and increase sedimentation in the water catchment, potentially reducing the capacity of the dam on Lake Kenyir to mitigate floods.

Communities

There are no local communities living permanently in the proposed protected area, but there are semi-nomadic indigenous people (Batek and Semaq Beri sub-ethnic groups) that enter the area to hunt and harvest forest products.

Creating a state park will provide numerous ecosystem services that will benefit local communities, such as flood mitigation and climate regulation.

Solutions

Rainforest Trust and local partner Rimba seek $2,265,930 to secure nearly 217,251 acres of unprotected forest connected to Taman Negara National Park, with an additional 31,676 acres upgraded to state park status through the support of Terengganu State Government.

The project area lies within a globally important Tiger Conservation Landscape and is a critical wildlife corridor in the Malaysian Central Forest Spine Master Plan for Ecological Linkages. Our local partner suggest naming the proposed protected area, encompassing 248,927 acres, Kenyir State Park.