Yes. Rainforests can still be found even to this day and can be visited in several National Parks, including Taman Negara in Peninsular Malaysia.
Yes
They are animals native to Indonesia and Malaysia and currently only found in the rainforests of Borneo and Sumatra
Malaysia has great rainforests and so you can find jungle animals such as elephants, cobras, pythons, crocodiles, leopards (in Malaysia most leopards are black panthers), and tigers.
Yes, in parts of South America as well as Africa, Austalia, Southeast Malaysia, and New Guinea, there are people who live in the rainforests.
1. - Indonesia - Papa New Guinea - Thailand - Myanmar - Japan - Malaysia
No. You can check it on google by typing endangered animals of the world. Orangutans are mainly found in Malaysia.
White tigers don't live in rainforests, weirdo.
Malaysia is known as a multi-racial country, with Malays, Chinese, Indians and Others (Sarawak and Sabah ethnic groups) all living together. Malaysia is also known for the Petronas Twin Towers, which is officially the highest twin buildings/structures in the world.
Most orangutans do live in tropical rain forests. Orangutans can be found living in regions of Malaysia, Sumatra, and Indonesia.
ofcourse ViennaVIENNA IS FAR BETTER THAN MALAYSIA IN EACH AND EVERY CONTEXT.I JUST LOVE VIENNA, ITS QUITE UNIQUE.LOVELY RUCHIHaving been to both Vienna and Malaysia, I would prefer to live in Malaysia if I were to choose. The food is better, the weather is better, and things are cheaper. Granted, Vienna is a better place for European culture and for classical music, but Malaysia is a melting pot of cultures - Muslim, Chinese and Indian are all exhibited in Malaysia. Vienna has its casinos and operas, Malaysia has its beaches and rainforests. So in my opinion, Malaysia is better
In Malaysia There are no deserts. Malaysia is made up of long peninsulas and a series of hilly forested islands, and there are no deserts on islands. I was suprised when I found that out! There are ,however, jungles, caves, beaches, islands and mountains in Malaysia. Hope this helped!
They used to live in rainforests throughout Southeast Asia, in nations such as Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. However, habitat loss as well as capture for the pet trade has decreased their range to only Malaysia and Sumatra (an island in Indonesia).