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| Subspecies: | Unknown |
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| Est. World Population: | U |
| CITES Status: | NOT LISTED |
| IUCN Status: | Vulnerable |
| U.S. ESA Status: | NOT LISTED |
| Body Length: | |
| Tail Length: | |
| Shoulder Height: | |
| Weight: | |
| Top Speed: | |
| Jumping Ability: | (Horizontal) |
| Life Span: | in the Wild |
| Life Span: | in Captivity |
| Sexual Maturity: | (Females) |
| Sexual Maturity: | (Males) |
| Litter Size: | |
| Gestation Period: | |
Habitat:
It occurs in freshwater swamp forest, peatswamp forest, mangroves, coastal forest, open scrub and secondary growth, including wooded gardens, to 200 m. Non-breeders occasionally visit higher elevation dry land forests.
Range:
Treron fulvicollis is confined to the Sundaic lowlands, where it is known from south Tenasserim, Myanmar, peninsular Thailand (recorded only from Ko Pratong Island in the last fifty years [Anon. 2003, eBird 2022]), Sabah, Sarawak and Peninsular Malaysia, Singapore (non-breeding visitor), Brunei (very uncommon) and Kalimantan (where not uncommon) and Sumatra (including the Riau and Lingga archipelagos, Bangka, Belitung, Siberut and Nias islands), Indonesia (BirdLife International 2001).
Conservation:
Conservation Actions Underway
None is known but it occurs in numerous protected areas.Conservation Actions Proposed
Survey to assess the population size. Regularly monitor at certain sites throughout its range to determine population trends. Investigate the extent and impact of hunting.
Protect remaining areas of primary forest and significant areas of secondary or logged forest throughout its range, in particular coastal lowland forest which are rare in Malaysia and Indonesia and are threatened by conversion to agricultural land (D. L. Yong in litt. 2016). Control hunting where possible, perhaps using awareness campaigns.
None is known but it occurs in numerous protected areas.Conservation Actions Proposed
Survey to assess the population size. Regularly monitor at certain sites throughout its range to determine population trends. Investigate the extent and impact of hunting.
Protect remaining areas of primary forest and significant areas of secondary or logged forest throughout its range, in particular coastal lowland forest which are rare in Malaysia and Indonesia and are threatened by conversion to agricultural land (D. L. Yong in litt. 2016). Control hunting where possible, perhaps using awareness campaigns.




