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Extinct Javan elephants may have been found again - in Borneo

Posted on 17 April 2008

The mysterious Borneo pigmy elephant - not native to Borneo, not related to Asia's existing elephant species

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Logging elephant habitat in Sabah

WWF personnel fit radio collars to elephants as part of the research effort to understand the Borneo pigmy elephant and conserve its future

Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia: The Borneo pygmy elephant may not be native to Borneo after all. Instead, the population could be the last survivors of the Javan elephant race – accidentally saved from extinction by the Sultan of Sulu centuries ago, a new publication suggests.

The origins of the pygmy elephants, found in a range extending from the north-east of the island into the Heart of Borneo, have long been shrouded in mystery. Their looks and behaviour differ from other Asian elephants and scientists have questioned why they never dispersed to other parts of the island.

But a new paper published today supports a long-held local belief that the elephants were brought to Borneo centuries ago by the Sultan of Sulu, now in the Philippines, and later abandoned in the jungle. The Sulu elephants, in turn, are thought to have originated in Java.

Javan elephants became extinct some time in the period after Europeans arrived in South-East Asia. Elephants on Sulu, never considered native to the island, were hunted out in the 1800s.

“Elephants were shipped from place to place across Asia many hundreds of years ago, usually as gifts between rulers,” said Mr Shim Phyau Soon, a retired Malaysian forester whose ideas on the origins of the elephants partly inspired the current research. “It’s exciting to consider that the forest-dwelling Borneo elephants may be the last vestiges of a subspecies that went extinct on its native Java Island, in Indonesia, centuries ago.”

If the Borneo pygmy elephants are in fact elephants from Java, an island more than 1,200 km (800 miles) south of their current range, it could be the first known elephant translocation in history that has survived to modern times, providing scientists with critical data from a centuries-long experiment.

Scientists solved part of the mystery in 2003, when DNA testing by Columbia University and WWF ruled out the possibility that the Borneo elephants were from Sumatra or mainland Asia, where the other Asian subspecies are found, leaving either Borneo or Java as the most probable source.

The new paper, “Origins of the Elephants Elephas Maximus L. of Borneo,” published in this month’s Sarawak Museum Journal shows that there is no archaeological evidence of a long-term elephant presence on Borneo.

“Just one fertile female and one fertile male elephant, if left undisturbed in enough good habitat, could in theory end up as a population of 2,000 elephants within less than 300 years,” said Junaidi Payne of WWF, one of the paper’s co-authors. “And that may be what happened in practice here.”

There are perhaps just 1,000 of the elephants in the wild, mostly in the Malaysian state of Sabah. WWF satellite tracking has shown they prefer the same lowland habitat that is being increasingly cleared for timber rubber and palm oil plantations. Their possible origins in Java make them even more a conservation priority.

“If they came from Java, this fascinating story demonstrates the value of efforts to save even small populations of certain species, often thought to be doomed,” said Dr Christy Williams, coordinator of WWF’s Asian elephant and rhino programme. “It gives us the courage to propose such undertakings with the small remaining populations of critically endangered Sumatran rhinos and Javan rhinos, by translocating a few to better habitats to increase their numbers. It has worked for Africa’s southern white rhinos and Indian rhinos, and now we have seen it may have worked for the Javan elephant, too.”

For contacts and more information, see media release




Comments

haley_luvs_twinkies*

May 14, 2008 - 23:27

I THINK WE SHOULD ALL GO JAVAN!..IT'S THE NEW BLACK!

haley_luvs_twinkies*

May 14, 2008 - 23:26

i think elephants are cool...i would pay someone 73 cents to ride one.**

CNeufeld

May 13, 2008 - 14:36

This is awesome news! Finding extinct species always gives hope to people to work harder towards saving their environment. Hopefully the Malaysian government will protect some of the elephant's habitat.

natalie

May 12, 2008 - 17:58

HEY AGAIN STOP KILLING THERE TUSK PUT THEM DOWN. I AM SO MAD WITH WHAT VIS GOING GOING THIS WORLD STOP IT IT HAS STOP STOP KILLING THERE TREES BYE.

natalie

May 12, 2008 - 17:53

what is happening to the elephants?ALSO I HOPE THEY DO NOT DIE THE ARE VERY CUTIE AND EVERYONE LOVES THEM.

ramesh kanna

April 27, 2008 - 07:11

namashivaya,
can u people imagine a world without animals.pls save them.please stop clearing of forest.animals are much much beautiful and much much kind that human being.please save them.may god bless all of you.pls do something.i have planted more than 20 tree in malaysia highway.each of us can do something.please.

Judy in CA

April 26, 2008 - 18:21

Dear WWF: it is heartbreaking to watch asian elephants and other wildlife (orangs) losing habitat, being killed and nearing extinction because governments there do not value and protect them as the invaluable treasures they truly are. ngos in the field saving one or two elephants from entire herds that are killed for being "pests" is great, but why so little, so late? how can humanity allow this to happen? maybe there is hope for this wild elephant herd in borneo but only if their habitat is protected. but is this really possible? are these timber companies providing timber for such powerful endusers that the govt allows their habitat to be destroyed? who are the endusers? who is stopping the timber companies from destroying wildlife habitat all over asia? can they be stopped?

Biljana Fidanoska

April 26, 2008 - 11:55

This is a really great news in this sad world today. I can never understand how anyone would hurt an animal.
But we need to work hard to stop it.

Sojan Jose

April 26, 2008 - 06:55

it is matter of luck that these elephants are alive. Hope the number will increase soon.

Damian Oh

April 26, 2008 - 03:50

With all the other disturbing things that have been going on, this indeed is good news.

 

 

 

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