Malaysia’s rainforests are alive with song—and Dr Aini Hasanah hopes to translate every single note to protect our endangered gibbon populations
A haunting melody breaks the silence in the early morning light filtering through the dense canopy of Terengganu’s Kenyir rainforest. Most visitors will never glimpse the musicians—endangered whitehanded gibbons and siamang—but their songs carry vital information about these elusive creatures that Dr Aini Hasanah Mutalib is determined to decode.
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A research officer at the Institute of Tropical Biodiversity and Sustainable Development at Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Aini’s journey into conservation began not with primates, but with marine turtles along the shores of Setiu, Terengganu.
“Wildlife conservation isn’t rocket science,” she quips, her tone wry. “It’s harder.” Her pivot to primatology was driven by Malaysia’s extraordinary—and often overlooked—biodiversity.
The country is home to 26 primate species, including the endangered gibbons and siamang, which she describes as “forest engineers.” These acrobatic apes, though lesser-known than orangutans, play a critical role in seed dispersal, nurturing the very ecosystems that sustain Malaysia’s rainforests.
“Imagine walking into a forest,” she says. “You might not see a tiger, but you’ll hear gibbons. Their songs are part of our national heritage.” This blend of ecological urgency and cultural pride underscores her mission: to elevate these “charismatic” species from obscurity to icons of conservation.







