Taiwan
I spent a week in Taiwan in August 2017. The country is not at all what I imagined: far more forest, mountains and mammals.I returned for two nights in July 2018.
Dasyeushan National Forest Recreation Area
Two nights batting here in July 2018 produced numerous Taiwan Serows and Red and White Giant Flying Squirrels, plus three or four Reeve’s Muntjaks and a Masked Palm Civet. We caught a few Taiwanese Broad-muzzled Myotis, Eastern Barbastelles and Eastern Bentwing Bats, a single Formosan Lesser Horseshoe bat and one rather rare Taiwan Long-eared Bat. There were Great Roundleaf Bats roosting in a tunnel just below the park gate.
Guano National Forest Recreation Area
I spent two nights here in 2017 with Chao-Lung Hsu from the Taipei bat society so we had permits to harp trap for bats and catch small mammals.
Spotlighting along the road we had Red and White Giant Flying Squirrel, Formosan Horseshoe Bat (Rhinolophus formosae) and a Chinese Ferret Badger.
Bat trapping produced Formosan Lesser Horseshoe Bat (Rhinolophus monoceros), the newly described Taiwan Long-toed Myotis (Myotis secundus sp. nov), Taiwan Broad-muzzled Mouse-eared Bat (Submyotodon latirostris) and a rare Eastern Barbastelle (Barbastella darjelingensis).
Small mammal trapping was also pretty good. We caught several Oldfield White-bellied Rats, a couple of Black-bellied (Pere David’s) Voles and abundant Formosan Field Mice.
Other mammals in the park include Formosan Serow but they are very rarely encountered.
Hualien City
I spent a night here in 2017 and successfully found the critically endangered Taiwanese subspecies of Ryukyu Flying Fox.
Taipei
And in 2017 I had great views of several Formosan Giant Flying Squirrels in the Fuyang Eco Park downtown, along with a few Pallas’s Squirrels.
Yunlin County
We visited the Golden Bat’s Home (a small museum based in a school) in 2017 to see Hodgson’s Myotis roosting in trees in the school yard, as well as Asiatic Lesser Yellow House Bats and Japanese Pipistrelles in batboxes around the school.
Were it not for two, back to back, typhoons, we would have visited another site and almost certainly see the endemic Taiwanese Serow. Definitely a place to return to soon.
Community Reports
Taiwan, 2019: Vladimir Dinets, 2 days & species including several shrews and bats.
Taiwan, 2019: Jon Lehmberg, 12 days & 11 species including Yellow-throated Marten and Ryuku Flying Fox.
Dasyeushan, 2018: Jon Hall, 2 nights & 10 species including Taiwan (Formosan) Serow and Taiwan Long-eared Bat.
Taiwan, 2018: Vladimir Dinets, 4 days & 40 species including many bats, rats and shrews, an Asiatic Black Bear and a peculiar Weasel.
Taipei and around, 2018: Vladimir Dinets, 4 days and species including Chinese Ferret Badger, Crab-eating Mongoose and Great Roundleaf Bat.
Taiwan, 2017: Jon Hall, 5 days & 18 species including Taiwan Macaque, Red and White Giant Flying Squirrel, Chinese Ferret Badger and Eastern Barbastelle.
Taiwan, 2016: John Wright, 10 days & 14 species including Taiwan Macaque, Taiwan Serow, Red and White Giant Flying Squirrel and Blainville’s Beaked Whale.
Taiwan, Korea and Japan, 2016: Dominque Brugiere, 5 weeks and lots of great mammals including – in Taiwan – Taiwan Serow, Siberian Weasel and Chinese Ferret Badger; in Korea – Finless Porpoise; in Japan – Japanese Badger, Japanese Marten, Amami Rabbit, Largha Seal and Japanese Weasels.
Also See
Clouded Leopards in Taiwan? – read the comments too (November, 2019)
Common Pipistrelle roost (July, 2019)
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