A video â€œcamera trapâ€ positioned inside the jungle has captured rare footage of an elusive Borneo rhino, WWF and Malaysiaâ€™s Sabah Wildlife Department announced today.

This two-minute video â€“ showing the animal eating, walking to the camera and sniffing the equipment â€“ is the first-ever footage of observing the behaviour in the wild of one of the worldâ€™s rarest rhinos. Well sniffing the camera might not be giving this video full justice. I have a feeling that if this had been anything other than a camera that this rhino would have messed it up pretty good. That big black horn on its head doesn’t look like its used to pick its teeth.



The Borneo Rhino is closely related to this Indian Rhino

Scientists estimate there are only between 25 and 50 rhinos left on the island of Borneo. These last survivors of the Bornean subspecies of Sumatran rhinos are believed to remain only in the interior forests of Sabah, Malaysia â€“ an area known as the â€œHeart of Borneo.â€ The rhinos are so secretive that the first-ever still photo of one was captured last year.

â€œThese are very shy animals that are almost never seen by people,â€ said Mahedi Andau, director of the Sabah Wildlife Department. â€œThis video gives us an amazing opportunity to spy on the rhinoâ€™s behaviour.â€

The rhinos in Sabah spend their lives in dense jungle where they are rarely seen, which accounts for the lack of any previous photographs of them in the wild.

The video camera trap that captured the rhino footage was developed by Stephen Hogg, Head of Audio Visual at WWF-Malaysia. After successfully testing the newly developed camera trap on Malayan tigers in Peninsula Malaysia, it was set up in Sabah to capture the Sumatran rhino. Photos and video footage can determine the condition of rhinos, help identify individual animals and show how they behave in the wild.

â€œWe did a pilot test with two of my video cameras in an area that the field team had determined was used by rhinos. The first time we checked them, after four weeks, there were these fantastic images,â€ Hogg said. â€œThis is further proof that these video cameras do work and are of value to our conservation work. This footage is awesome and could not have been better.â€

On Borneo, there have been no confirmed reports of rhinos apart from those in Sabah for almost 20 years, leading experts to fear that the species may now be extinct on the rest of the island. Major threats include poaching, illegal encroachment into key rhino habitats, and the fact that the remaining rhinos are so isolated that they may rarely or never meet to breed.

â€œThe photos and video footage will be used to determine the condition of the rhinos in the wild,â€ said Raymond Alfred, project manager for WWFâ€™s Asian Rhino and Elephant Action Strategy (AREAS). â€œBut we have to realize that these rhinos could face extinction in the next ten years if their habitat continues to be disturbed and enforcement is not in place.â€

Recently, the ministers of the three Bornean governments â€“ Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia and Malaysia â€“ signed an historic Declaration to conserve and sustainably manage the Heart of Borneo. This has put the area on the global stage of conservation priorities.