Tabin Wildlife Reserve is an extraordinary wilderness area occupying the majority of the the peninsula which forms the northern headland of Darvel Bay in the eastern section of the Malaysian Bornean state of Sabah.
The reserve covers 112,000 hectares, including 9,000 hectares of primary unlogged forest which provides a haven for a remarkably diverse range of wildlife including, among others: orangutan, gibbon, Borneo Pygmy elephant, Sumatran rhinoceros, proboscis monkey, silver langurs, bearded pigs, monitors and all eight species of Borneo's hornbills.
Visitors can look forward to trekking to The Lipad Mud Volcano, visiting breathtaking waterfalls, and going on night drives in search of nocturnal wildlife.