The next step: Phase I of BSBCC

After the successful fund raising event “Bear Necessities” on Nov 14 two weeks ago, we can finally move forward to start building our first phase of the construction: A brand new bear house with 24 bear dens and 4 forest enclosures where the captive sun bears can spend all day playing, climbing, and resting in a natural surrounding.

At the moment, our designer cum one of our architect in the project is finalizing the design and gets the final paper works for the construction. We hope the construction can start early next year and the construction will take up to six months to complete. At the same time, we will keep fund raise for Phase 2 and Phase 3. And, hopefully, yes hopefully-lots of hope and hard words, we can manage to raise the entire fund we needed to set up the BSBCC.

 Below is an article from Ian Hall, our designer, architect, and a good friend, on BSBCC which he wrote few months ago. It gives you the idea of what our plan is and hopes for the sun bears.

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Borneo Sun Bear Conservation Centre

photo name

Above is a concept design image for a sun bear conservation centre proposed adjacent to the Sepilok Orang Utan Sanctuary at Sandakan in Sabah.

Juvenile sun bears are undeniably cute and the adults are very handsome. Fully grown they would be a little above my knee in height, although rearing on hind legs they can be much more intimidating. Regrettably I have only seen them behind bars. The closest I have come to a wild sun bear was when I heard one raiding the kitchen during the night at Agathis Camp in Maliau Basin.

Sun bears are adaptable animals but unfortunately their habit of diversifying into convenience food often brings them into conflict with humans. Humans are also known to trap bears without provocation on the spurious grounds that bear body parts have medicinal properties. Also the fact that young bears are cute makes them popular in the illegal pet trade.

The sun bear’s main handicap to their conservation however, is their ecological position as an apex predator. The effect of this is that they live at very low densities. In the rainforest of Sabah, my friend Siew Te Wong estimates that they occur at the rate of approximately one bear to ten square kilometers. You do not have to chop down a lot of rainforest to make a big relative dent on the sun bear population.

Wong estimates that there may be 10,000 sun bears in their home range across Southeast Asia. To put this in perspective the estimated orang-utan population is approximately 50,000 with 41,000 of these in Borneo. Most people are familiar with orang utans, but the sun bear remains the least known of the eight species of bear and certainly attracts much less attention than their anthropomorphic red hairy neighbours.

The Borneo Sun Bear Conservation Centre (BSBCC) will be the first of it’s kind in Malaysia and is being set up in partnership with the Sabah State Wildlife and State Forestry Departments. It’s long term goal is to raise the profile and support for sun bear conservation. The first and most pressing objective however is to provide better welfare for sun bears currently being held in captivity in Sabah.

There are 9 bears in Sepilok at the moment and several more distributed across Sabah. Most of these animals have either been confiscated by or been deposited with the Wildlife Department. They are held in small cages with no access to outside spaces.

The brief of BSBCC is to provide individual night time denning for 36 bears in two phases. There will be additional cages for quarantine, treatment and birthing. A vital facility to the well being of the bears is to provide every animal with controlled access to primary forest during daytime. The total area of forest pens will be about 2 hectares and bears will be prevented from escaping using fences and hot-wires. The Forestry Department has approved a part of the Sepilok Forest Reserve to be used for this purpose and the Wildlife Department has given the go ahead to adapt an enclosure formerly designed to contain Sumatran Rhinoceros.

The final component of the brief is to provide staff facilities plus a shop and visitor centre. Tired of stuffy ‘nature interpretation galleries’, the Arkitrek concept is interpretive information presented as a walk from the built environment into the forest. The walk is designed to be accessible to everyone and culminates in an observation gallery which is part seminar space, part interpretive display and part pavilion in the forest from where sun bears can be observed in their natural environment.

http://arkitrek.com/sunbear/

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6 Comments

  1. Pirjo,Finland
    Posted December 2, 2008 at 3:00 am | Permalink

    The construction plan looks great and it’s so heartwarming to know that these lovely bears will have they own sanctuary. This picture of you giving treats to two sun bears is lovely and I don’t wonder at why you are determided to save them.

  2. Annie
    Posted December 2, 2008 at 8:43 pm | Permalink

    Looks to be awesome!

  3. Annie
    Posted December 2, 2008 at 8:44 pm | Permalink

    The bears are adorable too by the way!

  4. Posted December 2, 2008 at 9:42 pm | Permalink

    It has took a long time to come this far. I know is long time for the bears to wait, but at least we are making progress. Hopefully everything will more faster once we have the hardware and the facility ready. Wish us luck and keep supporting us!
    Thanks!
    Wong

  5. Posted December 5, 2008 at 9:23 pm | Permalink

    BTW, if you have trouble getting into the social network, because of not being a member, try this other option:

    click on ecopaparazzi from the blogroll on my personal website: http://www.jeanettemcdermott.org

    All the best,
    Jeanette

  6. Julie Trump
    Posted January 27, 2009 at 1:55 pm | Permalink

    So excited about the new conservation centr – can’t wait to see when go back to Sepilok in July.
    Anyone in interested in helping raise funds for BSBCC in the UK please contact me at:julie.trump@btinternet.com
    We have set up Bornean Sun Bear Conservation UK (see on website – under ‘conservation’ & BSBCC) and have been raising funds in England to help the bears.

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  1. [...] Here’s a visual testament  of  our volunteers at work a few days ago at the Bornean Sunbear Conservation Centre. [...]

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