Restricted-range species The Bornean mountains are rich in restricted-range species, and their distinctive avifauna includes four endemic genera, Haematortyx, Chlamydochaera, Oculocincta and Chlorocharis. A further 13 species are endemic to Borneo (Andrew 1992; see Collar and Long 1996), but all of these occur too widely in the lowlands to be treated as restricted-range species, other than Microhierax latifrons and Malacocincla perspicillata whose ranges define Secondary Areas s098 and s099 respectively. Many of the mountains on Borneo are ornithologically unexplored or poorly known, particularly those in Kalimantan, so knowledge of the habitat requirements and distributions of the restricted-range birds within the EBA is inevitably incomplete (see Smythies 1981, Mann 1987, Davison 1992). Most of these species are found in both lower and upper montane forest, and some also range down into hill dipterocarp forest below 1,000 m. Batrachostomus harterti, Calyptomena hosii, Pycnonotus nieuwenhuisii and Oculocincta squamifrons were categorized as lowland-forest-slope specialists by Wells (1985), although most of them occur in lower montane forest as well as hill dipterocarp forest. Several species appear to have particularly restricted ranges on Borneo, but in most cases this is probably a reflection of the uneven ornithological coverage of the island. Spilornis kinabaluensis, Otus brookii (in this EBA), Zoothera everetti, Garrulax calvus, Bradypterus accentor and Oriolus hosii are only recorded from East Malaysia (and Spilornis kinabaluensis in Brunei) in the northern and western parts of the EBA. However, some of these species probably occur also in Kalimantan, where recent survey work has resulted in the first Indonesian records of Harpactes whiteheadi, Megalaima pulcherrima, Rhinomyias gularis and Arachnothera juliae, and the first record of Zosterops atricapillus in Kalimantan (Robson 1993b, S. van Balen per Rudyanto in litt. 1996). Four species are not recorded from Sabah: Otus brookii, which is only known (in this EBA) from Mt Dulit in Sarawak, Batrachostomus harterti, Pycnonotus nieuwenhuisii, which is only known (in this EBA) by one specimen from Kalimantan and recent sightings in Brunei (and could be an extremely rare morph of another species, or be of hybrid origin: Williams in prep.), and Oriolus hosii, which is only recorded from Sarawak. None of the restricted-range birds has been recorded in the mountains of Kalimantan Selatan in the south-east of the EBA, but some of them are likely to occur in the montane forests there. |