• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Adorable Wild Bornean Clouded Leopard Family Caught On Camera For First Time

June 12, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

A hidden camera has caught extremely rare footage of a family of endangered Bornean clouded leopards (Neofelis diardi borneensis) as they scamper and prowl around the rainforest.

Advertisement

Orangutan Foundation, together with Tanjung Puting National Park, recently captured the adorable video (below) using a camera trap in the dense lowland forests of Indonesian Borneo. While the rare subspecies has been filmed in the wild before, this is the first time researchers have spotted a mother with her two offspring. 

Advertisement

“The clouded leopard is an arboreal species and excellent hunter on the ground that plays an important role in maintaining the ecosystem. As one of the rarest species to find, being able to see a female and cubs gives us evidence that they are healthy and actively breeding,” Anxious Yoga Perdana, Research Manager, said in a statement.  

The Tanjung Puting National Park is abundant in wonderful wildlife, including the largest wild orangutan population in the world,  230 species of birds, nine species of primates, and two species of crocodiles.

Arguably the region’s cutest resident, the Bornean clouded leopard is a subspecies of the Sunda clouded leopard that lives on the island of Borneo. The other subspecies, the Sumatran clouded leopard, lives on the neighboring island of Sumatra (no surprises there). 



Advertisement

Genetic analysis suggests the two clouded leopards diverged from wild cats on the mainland around 1.4 million years ago. The Bornean clouded leopard then diverged from the Sumatran clouded leopard in the Late Pleistocene, a period that ended some 11,700 years ago, when a wave of global cooling and warming severed the islands of Borneo and Sumatra from each other. 

One idea is that the split of the two subspecies is linked to the “super eruption” of the Toba volcano in Sumatra around 74,000 years ago – a catastrophic even that was arguably humanity’s closest call with extinction yet. 

So the theory goes, clouded leopards from Borneo recolonized Sumatra in the wake of the super eruption during times of low sea levels, but were then separated from their source population by rising sea levels. As the separated populations adapted to their different niches and reproduced, they evolved into distinct subspecies.

A 2007 estimate suggested that between 5,000 and 11,000 clouded leopards lived in Borneo, but that number has almost certainly dropped since then. Orangutan Foundation states the Bornean clouded leopard is classified as an Endangered species by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. As a result of habitat loss from deforestation, their population numbers have been reduced to less than a third in recent years. 

Advertisement

They aren’t the only life that’s imperilled by habitat loss in Borneo. The island’s most iconic and beloved animal, the orangutan, has also fallen victim to rampant deforestation driven by the demand for palm oil and timber. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. U.N. footage from northern Ethiopia shows humanitarian crisis
  2. Web host Epik was warned of a critical website bug weeks before it was hacked
  3. How Do They Do That? Burmese Pythons Open Wide For Super-Size Prey
  4. “Microdiamonds” And Meteorite Crater Discovered Under French Vineyard

Source Link: Adorable Wild Bornean Clouded Leopard Family Caught On Camera For First Time

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • New Nightmare Fuel Unlocked: Watch The First Known Capture Of A Shrew By A False Widow Spider
  • Peculiar Glow In The Milky Way Might Be Dark Matter Signature
  • “I Was Scared To Death”: Missouri’s Great Cobra Scare Of 1953 Was Eventually Solved After 35 Years
  • Two Spacecraft To Fly Through Comet 3I/ATLAS’s Ion Tail – Will They Be Able To Catch Something?
  • Pioneering Heavy Water Detection Suggests Earth’s Water Might Be Older Than The Sun
  • PhD Students’ Groundbreaking New Technique Rescues JWST’s Highest Resolution Data
  • Popcorn-Like Parasites And Weird Worms Among 14 New Species Discovered In The World’s Oceans
  • Poem From 1181 CE Cairo Appears To Reference A Rare Galactic Supernova
  • With “Iridescent Live Colors”, Newly Discovered Beautiful Dwarfgoby Lives Up To Its Name (Mostly)
  • “Anti-Tail” And Odd 594-Kilometer Feature Found On Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS By Keck Observatory
  • Why Do We Call It A “Hamburger” When It Doesn’t Contain Ham?
  • What Aristotle Got Wrong About The Octopus
  • The World’s Largest Island Is Shrinking And Shifting
  • Record-Breaking Marshmallow Planet – It’s A Cold, Peculiar World On A Very Slanted Orbit
  • Distinctive Rocks Might Be Remnants Of Earth Before The Collision That Made The Moon
  • Bright Northern Lights Across America Expected This Week As 3 Coronal Mass Ejections Fly Towards Earth
  • Brain Implant Enables Paralyzed Man To Feel And Use Objects Using Someone Else’s Hands
  • “This Is A Really Big Deal”: Brain Training Significantly Improves Key Neurochemical Levels In World First
  • “Wholly Unexpected”: First-Ever Fossil Paranthropus Hand Raises Questions About Earliest Tool Makers’ Identity
  • For Centuries, Nobody Knew Why Swiss Cheese Has Holes. Then, The Mystery Was Solved.
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version