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[[Asia]] > [[Indonesia]] > [[Sebangau National Park]]
 
[[Asia]] > [[Indonesia]] > [[Sebangau National Park]]
[[File: Gibbon Sebangau.jpg | 300px | thumb| right | © Susan Cheyne]]
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= Summary = <!-- An overview of the site, with one sentence for each section. May include a site map -->
 
= Summary = <!-- An overview of the site, with one sentence for each section. May include a site map -->
 
* Bornean white-bearded gibbons (''Hylobates albibarbis'') are present in Sebangau National Park.
 
* Bornean white-bearded gibbons (''Hylobates albibarbis'') are present in Sebangau National Park.
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= Site characteristics = <!-- A paragraph summary of physical and geographic aspects of the site, and a table of key information -->
 
= Site characteristics = <!-- A paragraph summary of physical and geographic aspects of the site, and a table of key information -->
 
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[[File: Gibbon Sebangau.jpg | 300px | thumb| right | © Susan Cheyne]]
 
The Sebangau National Park catchment is characterised by deep peatland and low elevation. The area is flooded for 8 months of the year, and there are very few hill ridges from which gibbons can sing. In terms of habitat type and topography, study areas are representative of the rest of the catchment, though threats (e.g., land conversion, logging)  are less at the Natural Laboratory of Peat Swamp Forest (NLPSF) where the bulk of studies are conducted. The Sabangau catchment comprises three different forest types: mixed swamp forest, low pole forest  and tall interior forest (Cheyne et al. 2008). The park was established in 2004.
 
The Sebangau National Park catchment is characterised by deep peatland and low elevation. The area is flooded for 8 months of the year, and there are very few hill ridges from which gibbons can sing. In terms of habitat type and topography, study areas are representative of the rest of the catchment, though threats (e.g., land conversion, logging)  are less at the Natural Laboratory of Peat Swamp Forest (NLPSF) where the bulk of studies are conducted. The Sabangau catchment comprises three different forest types: mixed swamp forest, low pole forest  and tall interior forest (Cheyne et al. 2008). The park was established in 2004.
  
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