Home News Roads broke up an endangered monkey’s habitat. Can bridges fix it?

Roads broke up an endangered monkey’s habitat. Can bridges fix it?

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High up the hill road leading to Malaysia’s Penang National Park, cars and motorbikes zip by the forest at great speeds. Some 40 feet above a particularly busy turn, almost invisible to the casual observer, hangs an aerial bridge made of rope and recycled fire hoses. It’s easy to miss, but this humble crossing has the power to save lives.

Dusky langur lives, that is. 

Why We Wrote This

In Malaysia’s Penang forests and beyond, novel road crossings are helping humans and wildlife coexist peacefully.

Once abundant on Peninsular Malaysia, these endangered primates – also known as dusky leaf monkeys – have wide, white-circled eyes that make them look serious and spectacled, and they are critical to the local ecosystem. The Langur Project Penang, a citizen science project founded by wildlife researcher Jo Leen Yap, has seen thousands of animals cross the road safely using its bridge. 

This aerial crossing – the first of its kind in Malaysia – is part of a global trend of conservationists using bridges, tunnels, and other passageways to address habitat fragmentation caused by human development. “As we humans encroach more and more into the natural world, we also need to step up and take responsibility for the welfare of our wildlife,” says Allen Tan of the conservation group Habitat Penang Hill. “Jo Leen’s bridge is a great step in that direction.”

Teluk Bahang, Malaysia

High up on the hill road leading to Malaysia’s Penang National Park, cars and motorbikes zip by the forest at great speeds. Some 40 feet above a particularly busy turn, almost invisible to the casual observer, hangs an aerial bridge made of rope and recycled fire hoses. It’s easy to miss, but this humble crossing has the power to save lives.

Dusky langur lives, that is.

Once abundant all over Peninsular Malaysia, these endangered primates – also known as dusky leaf monkeys – have wide, white-circled eyes that make them look serious and spectacled, and they are critical to the local ecosystem. Their numbers are decreasing partly because of their own movements; dusky langurs travel between treetops by jumping from branch to branch with total abandon, but when tree coverage is thin, they resort to using electrical cables or scurrying across the ground, often leading to electrocution and fatal collisions with motorists. The Langur Project Penang (LPP), a citizen science project founded by wildlife researcher Jo Leen Yap, counted seven instances of roadkill on this half-mile stretch of Teluk Bahang road before the bridge went up. Since then, thousands of animals have crossed the road without incident. 

Why We Wrote This

In Malaysia’s Penang forests and beyond, novel road crossings are helping humans and wildlife coexist peacefully.

This aerial crossing – the first of its kind in Malaysia – is part of a global trend of conservationists using bridges, tunnels, and other passageways to address habitat fragmentation caused by human development.

“As we humans encroach more and more into the natural world, we also need to step up and take responsibility for the welfare of our wildlife,” says Allen Tan, managing director of The Habitat Penang Hill, a rainforest conservation center that has awarded research grants to Ms. Yap through its charitable foundation. “Jo Leen’s bridge is a great step in that direction.”

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