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Photographer Rhett Ayers Butler captured a series of aerial images in January 2026 over Brunei’s Temburong District, highlighting the region’s largely intact lowland dipterocarp forest and the rivers that structure its landscape.
The pictures show peat-dark waterways, layered canopy, buttressed trunks, lianas and epiphytes, and the transition zones where forest meets cleared land across Borneo.
Temburong is geographically separated from the rest of Brunei by Malaysian territory and has avoided the industrial logging, plantation agriculture and major roads that have transformed large parts of neighboring Sabah and Sarawak.
Ulu Temburong National Park, accessible by river and foot, anchors the district and supports wildlife such as hornbills and gliding lizards (though not orangutans or elephants, which occur across the border in Malaysia). The photographer notes ethical constraints in drone use—keeping clear of people, infrastructure and wildlife—and frames aerial work as a way to reveal landscape patterns not visible from the ground while leaving sites undisturbed.
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