Gunung Mulu National Park
Gunung Mulu National Park
Important both for its high biodiversity and for its karst features, Gunung Mulu National Park, on the island of Borneo in the State of Sarawak, is the most studied tropical karst area in the world. The 52,864-ha park contains seventeen vegetation zones, exhibiting some 3,500 species of vascular plants. Its palm species are exceptionally rich, with 109 species in twenty genera noted. The park is dominated by Gunung Mulu, a 2,377 m-high sandstone pinnacle. At least 295 km of explored caves provide a spectacular sight and are home to millions of cave swiftlets and bats. The Sarawak Chamber, 600 m by 415 m and 80 m high, is the largest known cave chamber in the world.
Description is available under license CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0
Parc national du Gunung Mulu
Important aussi bien pour sa grande biodiversité que pour son caractère karstique, le Parc national du Gunung Mulu (52 864 ha), dans l'État de Sarawak sur l'île de Bornéo, constitue la région karstique tropicale la plus étudiée au monde. Le parc contient 17 zones de végétation comportant environ 3 500 espèces de plantes vasculaires. Il est considéré comme l'un des sites les plus riches au monde pour les palmiers, avec 109 espèces de 20 genres décrites. Le sommet du Gunung Mulu, un pic karstique haut de 2 377 m, domine le parc. Au moins 295 km de grottes explorées offrent un spectacle extraordinaire avec des millions de salanganes et de chauves-souris. La salle du Sarawak, qui mesure 600 m sur 415 m et 80 m de haut, est la plus grande salle souterraine connue au monde.
Description is available under license CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0
الروضة الوطنيّة في غونونغ مولو
تشكّل الروضة الوطنيّة في غونونغ مولو (52864 هكتارًا) التي يقع في إقليم ساراواك في جزيرة بورنيو والمهمّ من حيث تنوّعه البيولوجي الكبير وطابعه الصلصالي، المنطقة الصلصالية المدارية الأكثر أهميّةً من ناحية دراستها في العالم. تتضمَّن هذه الروضة 17 منطقة لنمو النباتات تضمّ 3500 نوع تقريبًا من النباتات الوعائيّة. وهي تُُعتبر من أغنى المواقع في العالم بأشجار النخيل مع 109 أصنافٍ من 20 نوعًا. وتكشف عليها قمة غونونغ مولو وهي قمة صلصالية يصل ارتفاعها الى 2377 متر. وتعطي المغاور المكتشفة التي تصل مساحتها إلى 295 كيلومترًا على الأقل، منظرًا رائعًا مع الملايين من العصافير والطيور. وتُعتبر قاعة ساراواك التي تبلغ مساحتها 600 مترٍ على 415 مترًا وارتفاعها 80 مترًا، أكبر كهفٍ عرفه العالم.
source: UNESCO/CPE
Description is available under license CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0
穆鲁山国家公园
穆鲁山国家公园,位于沙捞越州的巴婆罗岛,因其生物多样性和喀斯特地貌而闻名,世界上大多数研究喀斯特地貌的研究都在此进行。这座52 864公顷的公园包含17 个植物园,有维管植物3500多种。公园的棕榈树种类异常丰富,已知的就有20属,109种。公园位于2377米高的穆鲁山山麓,已开发的山洞至少达295公里,洞中景观壮丽,并栖息着上百万只蝙蝠。沙捞越洞穴,长600米,宽415米,高80米,是已知世界上最大的洞穴。
source: UNESCO/CPE
Description is available under license CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0
Национальный парк Гунунг-Мулу (штат Саравак, остров Борнео)
Примечательный как своим высоким биоразнообразием, так и развитием уникального карстового рельефа, национальный парк Гунунг-Мулу расположен на острове Калимантан (Борнео), в штате Саравак. Это один из самых хорошо изученных районов тропического карста в мире. Площадь парка 52,9 тыс. га, при этом в нем отражены 17 растительных зон и представлены примерно 3,5 тыс. видов сосудистых растений. Особенно велико разнообразие пальм – 109 видов, принадлежащих 20 родам. Над местностью доминирует Гунунг-Мулу, остроконечная вершина высотой 2377 м, сложенная песчаником. Здесь исследовано, по крайней мере, 295 км пещерных ходов, которые представляют собой великолепное зрелище и служат убежищем для миллионов птиц и летучих мышей. Карстовая полость Саравак, размером 600х415 м и высотой 80 м, – крупнейшая из всех подземных залов мира.
source: UNESCO/CPE
Description is available under license CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0
Parque Nacional de Gunung Mulu
Situado en el Estado de Sarawak, en la isla de Borneo, este parque de 52.864 hectáreas ofrece un gran interés no sólo por su gran biodiversidad, sino también por sus formaciones geológicas, que hacen de él la zona cárstica tropical más estudiada del planeta. El sitio alberga 17 zonas de vegetación con unas 3.500 especies de plantas vasculares y se considera uno de los lugares del mundo más ricos en palmeras, ya que se han catalogado 109 especies de 20 géneros distintos. La cima del Gunung Mulu, un pico cárstico de 2.377 metros de altitud, domina el conjunto del parque. Se han explorado por lo menos unos 295 km. de la red de cuevas del sitio, que ofrecen un espectáculo extraordinario con los millones de salanganas y murciélagos que las pueblan. Destaca entre todas ellas la llamada Cámara de Sarawak, una gruta de 600 metros de largo, 415 de ancho y 80 de altura, que es la mayor cavidad subterránea del mundo descubierta hasta la fecha.
source: UNESCO/CPE
Description is available under license CC-BY-SA IGO 3.0
グヌン・ムル国立公園
生物の多様性とカルスト地形で有名なグヌンムル国立公園はボルネオ島サラワク州に位置し、世界で最も研究されてきた熱帯地域である。5万2864haの公園は17の植物群落のゾーンを有し、3500種もの維管束植物を見せてくれる。特にヤシの種類が豊富で20属109種におよぶ。500万年前に生まれたムル山(2377m)は、カルスト地形のため世界で最も洞窟の多い山といわれている。サラワク洞窟は知られている洞窟のなかでは世界最長である。source: NFUAJ
Nationaal park Gunung Mulu
Het nationaal park Gunung Mulu is belangrijk vanwege zijn hoge biodiversiteit en karstkenmerken. Het park ligt op het eiland Borneo in de staat Sarawak en is het meest bestudeerde tropische karstgebied ter wereld. Het park van 52.864 hectare bevat zeventien vegetatiezones, met daarin 3.500 soorten vaatplanten. Er zijn uitzonderlijk veel palmsoorten, waarvan 109 soorten in twintig geslachten beschreven zijn. Het park wordt gedomineerd door de Gunung Mulu, een 2.377 meter hoge zandstenen spits. Verder is er 295 kilometer aan grotten ontdekt met daarin miljoenen zwaluwen en vleermuizen. De Sarawak kamer van 600 bij 415 bij 80 meter is de grootste rotskamer ter wereld.
Source: unesco.nl
Outstanding Universal Value
Brief synthesis
Gunung Mulu National Park, situated in the Malaysian State of Sarawak on the island of Borneo, is outstanding both for its high biodiversity and for its karst features. The park is dominated by Gunung Mulu, a 2,376 m-high sandstone pinnacle and the property is the most studied tropical karst area in the world. The geological Melinau Formation contains a remarkable concentration of caves, revealing a geological history of over more than 1.5 million years.
High in endemism, Gunung Mulu National Park provides significant natural habitat for a wide range of plant and animal species, both above and below ground. The 52,865 ha park contains seventeen vegetation zones, exhibiting some 3,500 species of vascular plants. Its palm species are exceptionally rich, with 109 species in twenty genera recorded, making it one of the worlds richest sites for palm species. Providing protection for a substantial area of Borneo’s primary tropical forest and a home for a high diversity of species, including many endemics and threatened species, the large cave passages and chambers provide a major wildlife spectacle in terms of millions of cave swiftlets and bats.
The property is home to one of the world's finest examples of the collapse process in karstic terrain and provides outstanding scientific opportunities to study theories on the origins of cave faunas. The deeply-incised canyons, wild rivers, rainforest-covered mountains, spectacular limestone pinnacles, cave passages and decorations found within the property produce dramatic landscapes and breathtaking scenery that is without rival.
Important both for its high biodiversity and for its karst features, Gunung Mulu National Park, on the island of Borneo in the State of Sarawak, is the most studied tropical karst area in the world. The 52,864-ha park contains seventeen vegetation zones, exhibiting some 3,500 species of vascular plants. Its palm species are exceptionally rich, with 109 species in twenty genera noted. The park is dominated by Gunung Mulu, a 2,377 m-high sandstone pinnacle. At least 295 km of explored caves provide a spectacular sight and are home to millions of cave swiftlets and bats. The Sarawak Chamber, 600 m by 415 m and 80 m high, is the largest known cave chamber in the world.
Criterion (vii): Gunung Mulu National Park is an area of exceptional natural beauty, with striking primary forest, karst terrain, mountains, waterfalls and the largest caves on earth. Sarawak Chamber, the largest cave chamber in the world, stretches 600 m in length by 415 m wide and 80 m high. With a volume of 12 million cubic meters and an unsupported roof span of 300 m, this chamber dwarfs any other large chamber so far discovered. Deer Cave at 120 to 150 m in diameter is the largest cave passage in the world known at the present time and the Clearwater Cave System holds the world record as the longest cave in Asia at 110 km of mapped and explored passages. As some of the largest caves in the world they contain fine examples of tropical river caves, flood incuts, vadose, and phreatic caves, exhibiting fine examples of all types of speleothems (structures formed in a cave by the deposition of minerals from water).
Criterion (viii): The park is an outstanding example of major changes in the earth’s history. Three major rock formations are evident; the Mulu Formation of Paleocene and Eocene shale’s, and sandstone, rising to 2,376 m at the summit of Gunung Mulu: the 1.5 km thick Melinau Limestone formation of Upper Eocene, Oligocene and Lower Miocene, rising to 1,682 m at Gunung Api; and the Miocene Setap Shale formation outcropping as a gentle line of hills to the west. Major uplift that occurred during the late Pliocene to Pleistocene is well represented in the 295 km of explored caves as a series of major cave levels. The surface and underground geomorphology and hydrology reveal significant information on the tectonic and climatic evolution of Borneo. The sequence of terrestrial alluvial deposits provides an important record of glacial – interglacial cycles with the series of uplifted caves ranging from 28 m to over 300 m above sea level are at least 2 to 3 million years old, indicating uplift rates of about 19 cm per 1,000 years.
Criterion (ix): The property provides significant scientific opportunities to study theories on the origins of cave fauna with over 200 species recorded, including many troglobitic species and it displays outstanding examples of ongoing ecological and biological processes. Seventeen vegetation zones have been identified along with their diverse associated fauna. Some 3,500 species of plants, 1,700 mosses and liverworts and over 4,000 species of fungi have been recorded within the property. There are 20,000 species of invertebrates, 81 species of mammals, 270 species of birds, 55 species of reptiles, 76 species of amphibians and 48 species of fish.
Criterion (x): The property supports one of the richest assemblages of flora to be found in any area of comparable size in the world. It is botanically-rich in species and high in endemism, including one of the richest sites in the world for palm species and contains outstanding natural habitats for in-situ conservation for a large number of species; Deer Cave alone has one of the largest colonies in the world of free tailed bats, Chaerephon plicata at over 3 million. This one cave also has the largest number of different species of bats to be found in a single cave. Several million cave swiftlets (Aerodramus sp.) have been recorded from one cave system, constituting the largest colony in the world. Many species of fauna are endemic and 41 species are included on the endangered species list.
Integrity
Covering a vast area ranging in altitude from 28 metres to 2,376 metres above sea level and containing steep escarpments and ridges, karst towers, caves, rivers and associated terraces and floodplains, the terrain of the property lends itself to using natural landscape features as boundaries. The boundaries are marked and for the most part follow rivers with short sections of cut boundaries to the south-west, east and north-west. A section of the boundary to the north-west follows the international border with the State of Brunei.
The Government and management agency for the property are in the process of designating two extensions to the property to overcome limits to the current boundaries, as full catchment protection is lacking. Additionally the neighbouring Gunung Buda National Park, covering catchments of high natural significance, will be added to the property, thus strengthening the security and integrity of the property. The Governments of Malaysia and Brunei are also collaborating to establish what will effectively become a buffer zone for the property by using the Labi Forest Reserve in Brunei that adjoins Gunung Mulu National Park. This collaboration builds upon the on-going Heart of Borneo (HOB) Initiative to which the Governments of Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia are committed.
Research at the park undertaken by both foreign and local researchers has assisted in providing a greater understanding of the property and its resources. Resulting information assists in decision-making and the formulation of management prescriptions. The State Government’s continued policy not to allow road access to the park since its establishment in 1974 ensures that uncontrolled access is greatly minimized. This contributes to the continued maintenance and protection of the park’s pristine conditions and ecological integrity. The land claims by the local people have been confirmed to be outside the boundary of the property and have hence resolved conflicts and issues in regards to land tenure and use within the boundary of the property. The State Government has also confirmed that it has no plan to implement dam projects that would significantly impact on the values of the property.
Protection and management requirements
Formally gazetted and constituted in 1974, the protection and management of Gunung Mulu National Park is fully backed by the National Parks and Nature Reserves Ordinance of 1998 and its subsidiary legislation, the National Parks and Nature Reserves Regulations of 1999. The Ordinance inter alia specifies the type of activities and developments that are allowed inside the boundaries of the national park, the various acts that constitute offences, the penalties applicable, and the process that has to be followed in dealing with such offences. The Regulations specify the prescriptions for carrying out the provisions of the principal Ordinance, for example Part III (C) of the Regulations has a specific section that deals with measures for the protection and management of caves.
Located in the State of Sarawak, Gunung Mulu National Park is under the prime responsibility of the State of Sarawak for management and protection. Management plans have been developed for the property and implementation has been effective.
Management related infrastructure includes a park headquarters, field stations and a system of trails with access restricted to four “show caves”. Management interventions ensure that there is limited human interference in the natural system and assist in controlling impacts from increased tourism levels. Currently, over 90% of the park and 95% of caves are closed to visitors. The only exception is access to areas for research purposes. Further, there is also reduced access to some sensitive caves. The use of an Integrated Development and Management Plan ensures very strict controls on physical developments in relation to sites, scope, scale, and aesthetic characteristics (of physical projects), so as to avoid “over development”. Development inside the property requires consultation with all relevant stakeholders especially the Special Park Committee which comprises members of local communities and other relevant stakeholders.
Illegal activities remain one of the major challenges in managing the property. Enforcement is carried out in collaboration with other relevant law enforcement agencies such as the Police, Customs, Airport Security, and the Sarawak Biodiversity Centre for protection of park resources. Patrolling of boundaries is incorporated in annual operations plans. Proposed extensions to the property, gazetting of Gunung Buda National Park, and establishment of Labi Forest Reserve on the Brunei side may provide buffers to illegal activities and assist in preventing them from occurring within the property and in the case of additional reserves this will provide wider refuge for wildlife species within the area. Hunting activities within the boundary of the property also remain an ongoing threat. However, this pressure is mainly confined to nomadic Penan communities who have been given permission to hunt non-totally protected species, such as the wild boar, for subsistence consumption only.
Areasof forest surrounding the property have been heavily logged and cut, up to the rivers that demark much of the boundary of the property and this remains an ongoing threat to its integrity and natural values. Extensions to the Park, covering a total area of about 33,000 ha would provide an additional buffer from illegal activities. However, increased erosion and resulting silt loads have potential to significantly alter the aquatic ecology and require monitoring while logging and conversion of forests adjacent to the property to palm oil plantation also require constant and on going attention due to potential impacts.