Source : Straits Times, Singapore, 25 Apr '06
By : Chang Ai-Lien
  

 
Pulau Tekong's treasures  
   
The island has been a safe haven for some of Singapore's most threatened animals, including one not seen here for 50 years.  
   
The military training grounds of Pulau Tekong have proven a sanctuary for Singapore's most elusive wildlife, including several species which have never been recorded here before.

The latest find - a Malaysian Porcupine, which has not been seen on the mainland for about 50 years.

 
RARE SIGHTINGS: Spotted on the island were species such as the Malayan Porcupine, Leopard cat, Pangolin,
Brown's Flap-legged Gecko and East Asian Ornate Chorus Frog.  Photos : Norman Lim

Postgraduate student Norman Lim, who had camped out on the island to do research, first caught a glimpse of the prickly rodent on the night of Dec 8 last year, when his torchlight picked up a head surrounded by short spines.

But the creature bolted and he needed proof of his rare sighting as well as to confirm what species it belonged to.

So he set up a photographic trap.

Motion-sensors wired to his digital camera meant that any creature to step into the area would automatically be photographed.

He baited the area with sweet potato and tapioca, and within a week, caught on film wild boars, plantain squirrels, emerald doves, rats and a juvenile pangolin.

He managed to get images of the porcupine on Dec 16 and 18.

"It was quite a surprise," he said. "This is not pristine rainforest, but the wildlife present shows what a valuable sanctuary the island is."

Mr.Lim is studying the scale-covered pangolin on the island as part of his master's project with the National University of Singapore's department of biological sciences.

His year of fieldwork is sponsored by the Singapore Zoo and the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society.

The Malayan Porcupine, which weighs around 4 to 5 kg, is the only species of porcupine native to the region.

The shy nocturnal species is little studied.

This is the first time the prickly creature has been spotted on the island, though military personnel on the island have seen a veritable menagerie that included pangolins, slow lorises and even leopard cats - the miniature felines that have all but disappeared from the mainland.

The rarely seen Brown's Flap-legged Gecko and a breeding population of the East Asian Ornate Chorus Frog were also recorded for the first time in Singapore there.

Another treasure found on the north-eastern island - fossil ferns, survivors of the Jurassic age. That is more than 135 million years ago. Beyond its shores, the clear waters serve as playgrounds for dolphins.

Many scientists believe less than 10 per cent of the animals in South-east Asia are known to science; particularly the "unglamorous" creatures such as flies and mosquitoes.

Singapore has already lost half its animal species, but because of its location in the heart of the tropics, the Republic is still home to a rich variety of species. Enough to attract scientists from all over the world to unearth new flora and fauna.

Professor Peter Ng, head of the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research, said that security areas such as Pulau Tekong and the Nee Soon swamp have helped protect some of Singapore's most threatened animals and plants.

"If we can discover a relatively large creature we haven't seen for 50 years, imagine what else could be out there," he said.

 
   

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