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Monday, August 6, 2012

Sarawak: Strolling at Damai

The Damai Beach Resort, below Santubong Mountain on the shore of the South China Sea, is a popular weekend destination for Kuchingites. It is also a pleasant place for a nature walk through the coastal forest and a jumping-off point for boat trips into the nearby waters. My next few posts will cover a wonderful day on the water - May 13, 2011 - but this one will keep us on land, conflating two trips to Damai on April 14th and May 13th.

There are a number of exotic ways to see the sights of Damai...

But for the purposes of this post, we will simply stroll into the forest.

Calophyllum pulcherrimum
For those of us who are not botanists, a few of the trees are labelled.  The labels may need a bit of interpretation: the proper scientific name of this tree is  Calophyllum pulcherrimum.

The others are left for us to figure out.  Anyone know what this is?

A few examples of cauliflory, or fruits (and flowers) growing directly from large branches or trunks.  I believe that both of these are species of fig, but then, as I said, I am not a botanist.

Epiphytes, including this fern, cover many limbs in the forest.

Water Skink sp.
Water Skink sp.
Water Skink sp.
 Tiny, rocky streams flow through the forest into the sea.  Here live a number of water skinks (Tropidophorus).  The individual species are difficult to identify, and I don't know if the dark individual in the middle photograph is a different one from the other two, or simply a particularly dark animal.

water strider
Water striders straddle the stream surface...

Vestalis amoena or similar
...while damselflies dance along the banks.  This bright green insect is a member of the forest-dwelling genus Vestalis, but it is probably impossible to tell which.

Euphaea impar
Euphaea impar
This lovely damselfly is Euphaea impar, a fairly common dweller on forested streams.

Pearl Necklace (Bassarona dunya)
Butterflies are common along the forest edge.  Here is a rather tattered Pearl Necklace (Bassarona dunya monara).

Banded Swallowtail (Papilio demolion)
Banded Swallowtail (Papilio demolion)
This Banded Swallowtail (Papilio demolion) is in better shape.

Neurothemis ramburii
Neurothemis ramburii
Dragonflies at Damai include the common and widespread members of the genus Neurothemis; this, I believe, is Neurothemis ramburii (note the swept-back rear edging to the dark marking on the hindwing).

Neurothemis ramburii
Neurothemis ramburii
I suppose I should apologize for posting so many pictures of Neurothemis dragonflies in my blog entries from Malaysia, but in my defense I can say that they are (a) handsome and (b) approachable!

Orthetrum testaceum
Here's another common but attractive species: Orthetrum testaceum.

Orange-breasted Flowerpecker (Dicaeum trigonostigma)
Orange-breasted Flowerpecker (Dicaeum trigonostigma)
A clear entry in the common-but-gorgeous category is the tiny Orange-breasted Flowerpecker (Dicaeum trigonostigma), the commonest flowerpecker around Kuching. This one seems to be loading up on melastome berries.

Spectacled Bulbul (Pycnonotus erythropthalmos)
More subdued, but still attractive, is this Spectacled Bulbul  (Pycnonotus erythropthalmos), one of a group of frustratingly similar bulbuls.  Notice the distinctive eye-ring on this one.

Silvered Langur (Presbytis cristata)
Silvered Langur (Presbytis cristata)
Certainly the most striking animals on our stroll are these Silvered Langurs (Presbytis cristata), large, leaf-eating monkeys that have become quite used to the tourists around the resort.  Though you might not think it from the numbers around Damai, this is a species in decline, listed as Near Threatened by IUCN.  Its habitat, mostly coastal and riverside forest, is disappearing under the advance of oil palm, and it is still hunted in Sarawak.

Our stroll finished, it's time to go back to the shore - in the next three postings, we will be travelling by boat. It's a good thing that the waters are calm!

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