For Bookings: www.asiatravel.com For More Video: book.asiatravel.com Gunung Mulu National Park near Miri, Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that encompasses incredible caves and karst formations in a mountainous equatorial rainforest setting. The park is famous for its caves and the expeditions that have been mounted to explore them and their surrounding rainforest, most notably the Royal Geographical Society Expedition of 1977 – 1978, which saw over 100 scientists in the field for 15 months. The national park is named after Mount Mulu, the second highest mountain in Sarawak. Eight species of hornbill have been spotted in Mulu including the Rhinoceros Hornbill Buceros rhinoceros which features on Sarawak state emblem, the White-crowned Hornbill Berenicornis/Aceros comatus and the Helmeted Hornbill Buceros vigil with its large solid casque (bill). Twenty seven species of bat have been recorded in Mulu. Deer Cave in the southern limestone hills of the park is home to an enormous colony of Wrinkle-lipped bats Tadarida plicata. The bats exit the cave almost every evening in search of food in a spectacular exodus. A huge mound of guano in the cave is evidence of the size of the bat colony that roosts in the cave’s high ceilings. Mulu’s mammals also include the Bearded pig Sus barbatus, the moonrat Echinosorex gymnurus, shrews, the Bornean Tarsier Tarsius bancanus, the long-tailed Macaque Macaca fascicularis, gibbons, squirrels, and three types of deer …
Video Rating: 5 / 5


AMAZING video, very beautiful place !
But you forgot to mention the Bornean Orangutangs, endangered species but seen in Borneo.
Or has the population of them decrease that much since I did a paper on them in 10th grade,8 years ago (WOW has it really been that long?!?)