The Crown Jewel of Borneo: Danum Valley Conservation Area

A Living Laboratory and Last Sanctuary of Pristine Rainforest

 

Step into a world where time is measured in centuries, not years. The air hangs thick, fragrant with the scent of damp earth and blooming fungi. A profound, living silence is broken only by the distant chorus of gibbons, the rustle of a bearded pig in the understory, and the constant, monumental drip of water from leaves the size of shields.

This is not merely a forest. This is Danum Valley Conservation Area—a 438-square-kilometer fortress of primordial green in the heart of Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. It is one of the last and largest untouched expanses of pristine lowland dipterocarp rainforest on the planet, a realm where the great ecological clock has ticked, uninterrupted by axes or fire, for over 130 million years.

An elephant was found dead by the roadside near Danum Valley in 2014
1. The Crown Jewel: An Introduction to Danum Valley

Pristine beauty: Prince William and Kate at Danum Valley during their visit in 2012.
2. A Sanctuary of Life: The Ecological Heart


3. Guardians of the Green: Management & Key Institutions


4. Projects in the Pristine: The Science of Saving a Forest

5. Pioneers and Protectors: Important Contributors

6. Challenges on the Horizon: Conservation Under Pressure

7. A Legacy for the Future: Why Danum Valley Matters to the World