Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚥馃嚲 Malaysia

The Malayan tapir

Black-and-white, with a little wiggly trunk

A black-and-white Malayan tapir standing in green undergrowth, with its small trunk reaching for a leaf

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Malayan tapir is a strange and shy rainforest animal that looks a bit like a small, plump pony with a tiny elephant's trunk. They are black on the front and back legs, with a big white blanket of fur right in the middle - like a panda wearing a giant nappy. They live in the rainforests of Malaysia.

Tell me more

Tapirs are one of the oldest types of mammal still alive. Their family has been walking the Earth for about 20 million years. They look so unusual that scientists call them 'living fossils'. Their closest cousins, surprisingly, are horses and rhinos.

That funny little trunk is called a 'proboscis'. It is flexible like an elephant's trunk but much smaller. Tapirs use it to grab leaves and pull them off branches, to sniff out food, and even as a snorkel when they swim underwater. They are excellent swimmers and love to bathe in cool rainforest streams.

The black-and-white pattern looks bold to us, but in the rainforest it is amazing camouflage. At night, the dappled moonlight through the leaves breaks up their shape and they almost disappear. Predators - like the Malayan tiger - struggle to spot them in the gloom.

Baby tapirs are absolutely adorable. They are born brown with white spots and stripes all over - like a watermelon with legs. The pattern keeps them hidden in the dappled light of the forest floor. By the time they are about six months old, the spots fade and they grow into their grown-up black-and-white blanket pattern.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How can a bold black-and-white pattern actually help an animal hide?
  2. 02Why might baby tapirs have a totally different pattern from their parents?
  3. 03Tapirs use their nose as a snorkel. What other body parts do animals use in surprising ways?
Try this

Classroom activity

Print or draw a plain tapir outline. Decorate one as an adult (black and white) and one as a baby (brown with white spots and stripes). Display them together and discuss: which one is easier to spot? Why?