Philippine (Bornean) Slow Loris
At least I know with whom I will be doing nightwalks if both you and @Chlidonias are around
Philippine (Bornean) Slow Loris
Hey, I saw Slow Loris at Sepilok! I just can't find anything else...At least I know with whom I will be doing nightwalks if both you and @Chlidonias are around![]()
Hey, I saw Slow Loris at Sepilok!
I have never made a secret of my Slow Loris CurseAfter how many attempts though?
Our esteemed friend LD is positively attracting them. I think he must have a stash of loris pheromones that he rubs on before he goes out at night!![]()
Not quite. The Selangor langurs have been split from the rest of the population (in Borneo and Sumatra). So the ones in Borneo haven't changed at all. However it's a split which isn't followed by many people even though primatologists are renowned for taking any split they can get. (Basically it seems like a split for the sake of publishing a paper).
The slow loris splits in Borneo are about as rubbish as one can get. I certainly won't be following it until they come up with something better than "they look different". Compare to something like the Silky Anteater multiple splits, for example, where the evidence was comprehensive, covering physical appearance, skull shape, genetics, etc.
After how many attempts though?
Our esteemed friend LD is positively attracting them. I think he must have a stash of loris pheromones that he rubs on before he goes out at night!![]()
I have never made a secret of my Slow Loris Curse
In the case of the Bornean Slow Loris, I saw one on my second trip to Borneo. In the case of the Sunda Slow Loris, it only took ten years. I think that covers all the Slow Loris species in existence, at least as far as I'm aware...
I've seen Grey Slender Loris as well though.
For the langurs, the Selangor ones have been renamed Trachypithecus selangoriensis (if accepting the split). The Bornean and Sumatran ones are still Trachypithecus cristatus cristatus (there's another insular cristatus subspecies as well). Prior to the split the Selangor langurs were icluded within T. cristatus cristatus.I hadn't looked into the langur split at all, I'd just head that they'd been split and listed it, so I'll have to look into that later.
The loris split within Borneo did strike me as a bit odd but aren't the 'species' sympatric at the edge of the ranges? I don't think they integrade on a cline do they?
It's definitely a good split between the Bornean and Peninsula Malaysian slow lorises though isn't it?
Yeah, I really don't know what it is with me and lorises. They just hate me. I will spend hours out at night in places where other people have lorises handing out party balloons and invites to loris parties, and I will see nothing.Slow lorises aren't generally regarded as tricky mammals to find. I think Chli's ratio of spotlighting hours per slow loris sighting is more unusual than mine.
Maybe lorises are just allergic to kiwis? I've heard that a kiwi allergy is a thing.
Did you mean Grey-bellied?... but I did still find a few interesting things including a couple of endemics and Grey-headed Bulbuls …
And I know how challenging that can be!... whenever I'm identifying nondescript brown bulbuls ....
Did you mean Grey-bellied?
Yep, meant to write Grey-bellied (actually, my phone just autocorrected that to Grey-headed which explains it. Odd).
Tree Shrews seem to be uncommon at Sepilok. I haven't seen any there before, although I know they are there and should be seen. They do get reported quite often from the feeding stations at the Orangutan centre, but I never go there. Other places in Borneo like Mt. Kinabalu, Poring, Danum, etc, have Tree Shrews everywhere you look.Walking around on the trails though, I did find my first tree shrew on Borneo, a Large Tree Shrew. Given how many species there are present and how many are supposed to be common, I was expecting to see more.
The Brown Barbets are lovely birds. You don't expect them to look as nice as they do.There was a wild endemic Bornean Brown Barbet around too which is nice.
It's not so much that water droplets look like eye-shine, it's that you have reflections coming back at you from every direction which makes true eye-shine more difficult to detect. But wait until you try spotlighting in fog - all you get is a wall of light in front of you!Many mammal watchers claim that you can't spotlight when it's raining because the water droplets on leaves look like eyeshine.
By the way, while I like reading about the travels of other people in Asia, it makes me all twitchy and wanting to start packing my bags!