Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

orangutans and BOS Jakarta Post

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Three articles about orangutans and the work of BOS (Borneo Orangutan

Survival Foundation):

http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20040203.Q01

 

http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20040203.Q02

 

http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20040206.G03

 

 

Twice as many orangutans, but future just as bleak Features - February 03,

2004

 

 

Jacqueline Mackenzie, Contributor, Jakarta

 

The most detailed count of wild orangutans in the last decade has found that

there are between 50,000 and 60,000 orangutans left in the tropical forests

of Sumatra and Borneo, twice as many as had been estimated in recent years.

 

However, a conference of international orangutan experts at the Schmutzer

Primate Center in Jakarta recently has also found that the species has

declined by a third in the past decade, and will become extinct in around

two decades, if nothing is done to halt the trend.

 

" New survey data and computer modeling techniques revealed several new

populations of orangutans in Central and western Kalimantan. It's clear that

we have greatly underestimated the numbers in Borneo, " said Dr. Willie

Smits, Chairman of Borneo Orangutan Survival (BOS) Foundation, said to be

the world's largest primate conservation project.

 

" But this is not great news, because the rate of decline of the species

through habitat destruction and poaching is just as horrendous. If this

continues, in 20 years there will be no orangutans left in the wild. "

 

The conference also heard about recent efforts by Indonesian authorities to

stop poaching, with seven prosecutions of illegal traders in the last six

months.

 

However, these prosecutions have made little impact on the illegal trade,

according to Dr. Smits. He estimates a thousand infant orangutans, whose

mothers are shot in order to capture them, were smuggled into countries such

as Thailand and Malaysia in 2003.

 

" You have to remember that only 50 percent of the babies survive the

shooting of the mother, " said Dr. Smits.

 

" We have so many with bullets in the eyes and brains and near the heart, and

they are only the survivors. Many others die the moment the mother is

beheaded, as sometimes the babies get their arms and hands cut off too. "

 

Many more babies then die on the roads to the big cities, as the wrong diet

gives them diarrhea and yet others die from stress. So each of the thousand

represents two more thousand orangutans that never made it to trade.

 

By Dr. Smit's calculation, a total of 3,000 babies and 3,000 mothers - 4,500

females - are lost from the remaining orangutan population each year.

 

" Even if you had 200,000 orangutans, you're still losing them very, very

fast. The only thing the extra numbers do say is that it is not yet too late

to save them. "

 

" Oil palm plantations are now vigorously expanding all over Borneo, into the

lowland rain forests which are orangutan habitat, " said Dr. Smits.

 

" The plantations create small pockets of rain forest where the orangutans

are starving, opening the way for hunters. They eat the meat of the

orangutan, they shoot them to sell the skulls to stupid tourists, they sell

the baby orangutans in international trade. "

 

But the main cause of habitat destruction continues to be illegal logging,

which has increased since the push for local autonomy in recent years.

 

" More than half of all the wood cut in Indonesia is illegal, there is no

control, " said Dr. Smits.

 

" The concessions, that try to protect their own timber, they are now

disappearing also and the people go freely wherever they want. It's really

like the wild west. "

 

The fact that the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation is now the world's

largest primate conservation project is not something that makes Dr. Smits

proud.

 

" I would only be proud if I could close down these rehabilitation centers,

if there was no need to take in more babies. The centers mean we're failing

to save the wild orangutans. "

 

But Dr. Smits does not believe the situation is hopeless. He sees the recent

prosecution of illegal traders as an indicator that change is taking place.

 

" The fact that illegal traders are trying to campaign against the current

enforcement of the law is a good indication that we must be getting deep

into the comfort zone of some people, " he said.

 

He also gauges his effectiveness according to the number of death threats he

receives, and in the past month he's received two hundred.

 

" My family has moved twice already because of the terror against us -- our

effectiveness means we are bound to have huge fights coming up, " he said.

 

" But we should not run away from the conflict. It's the eleventh hour for

this great ape species, and if I did not believe it could be saved, I would

not be doing the things I do now. "

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20040203.Q02

 

We can learn a lot from 'Pongo' family

 

Features - February 03, 2004

 

 

Just as Asia's only great ape faces its greatest crisis, scientists have

released important new findings on the species.

 

The latest research has found that the major differences in appearance,

behavior and genetics of orangutans in Sumatra and Borneo warrant their

reclassification as separate species -- the Bornean Pongo pygmaeus and the

Sumatran Pongo abellii.

 

Previously they were regarded as subspecies of the same species.

 

" Sumatran orangutan females give birth, on average, once every nine years,

while females in eastern Borneo average six years, with western Borneo

females somewhere in between, " said Carel van Schaik, a professor of

biological anthropology at Duke University in the United States.

 

" The shorter birth-interval for eastern Borneo is probably as a result of

them having a slightly higher adult mortality. This is probably due to the

fact that orangutans in eastern Borneo have harsher climatic conditions to

deal with. They have less fruit and long periods of time when there are only

leaves to eat, " said Professor van Schaik.

 

" If you go into the leaf-eating business, there are risks that you'll poison

yourself, " he added

 

As well, scientists now regard Bornean orangutans as forming three separate

subspecies, with distinct differences even within subspecies in different

areas.

 

" Within Borneo there are all these big rivers which separate them and they

are clearly separate populations. They are biologically different, and what

is more for me as an anthropologist, is that we see all kinds of cultural

differences between orangutan populations. "

 

One example is how different populations perform their " kiss-squeak " , the

distress signal orangutans send to each other or to a predator.

 

" As researchers recording orangutan behavior in the forest canopy, we used

to just write down 'kiss-squeak', but we've just recently realized that in

some places they kiss-squeak on the flat of their hand, to enhance the

sound, while in other places they shape their hand like a trumpet and turn

it as they squeak.

 

" In other places they kiss on leaves, but sometimes it's a single leaf and

sometimes they strip a whole bunch of leaves. Then they stretch out their

hand and rain the leaves down on you.

 

It enhances the message that this animal is not a happy puppy, right? "

 

" Now this shows that the animals are incredibly 'copying-oriented'. Like us,

they have role models that they emulate and they say 'OK this is how one

does it here, I'll do it that way too.' "

 

Professor van Schaik believes studying such behavioral differences will help

us understand the evolution of human culture and intelligence.

 

" We are just another great ape, and yet we are so vastly different from the

others. What caused that? The best way to look at that, because our

ancestors are gone of course, is to look at all the variability among the

great apes we still have.

 

" What causes that variability, what brings all that out in the great apes?

(If we answer those questions) maybe we can extrapolate from that toward

humans. We might learn a lot about our own history by studying the

orangutans, but we need a lot of populations. You can't study that in one

population. So even if by some miracle one population is saved in

perpetuity, we will still lose that opportunity to study our own past. "

 

Professor van Schaik says the orangutan faces what he calls, 'the redwood

problem', based on President Reagan's comment 'If you've seen one redwood

you've seen them all.'

 

" If you apply that to the orangutans you think - I've looked at one

orangutan, now I know them all. It turns out you don't know them at all

because orangutans show incredible variability within and across their

subspecies, " said Professor van Schaik.

 

But these new classifications could soon be meaningless as species and

subspecies alike near extinction. There are fewer than seven thousand

Sumatran orangutan left, and the subspecies in East Kalimantan, the black

orangutan, has only a few fragmented populations remaining.

 

" Just imagine that you have to tell children, " said Professor van Schaik,

" 'this is the orangutan, it used to live in these forests. People sort of

figured out what they did but they didn't quite learn everything there was

to learn before they went extinct. And now you'll have to live in a world

without them.' "

 

" If we let a species become extinct that's so intelligent, so genetically

close to us, so charismatic, then what do the buffaloes have to hope for,

what do the birds have to hope for? " said Dr Willie Smits, Chairman of

Borneo Orangutan Survival (BOS) Foundation.

 

" And eventually that whole net is going to collapse - what do we humans have

to hope for ourselves? So the orangutan are a big warning flag for what is

so us to come. "

 

-- Jacqueline Mackenzie

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20040206.G03

 

Animal rescue center lacks funds, relies heavily on donations

 

City News - February 06, 2004

 

 

Theresia Sufa, The Jakarta Post, Bogor

 

Financial constraints and the low professionalism of staff are only some of

the major problems faced by the Cikananga Animal Rescue Center in Sukabumi,

West Java.

 

Head of the West Java Natural Resources Conservation Office (BKSDA), Suyatno

Sukendar, told the press here on Wednesday that the rescue center needed

around Rp 40 million (US$4,762) per month to feed around 1,400 animals at

the center.

 

" To fulfill the monthly needs of the animals, we have been relying on

donations from sponsors and animal lovers. We have also received financial

assistance from Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands, " he said.

 

" The government can't afford to provide any more for us. The routine budget

we get at the moment is only enough to cover our operational costs,

particularly law enforcement and the seizure of wild animals kept by

individuals as pets. "

 

There are around 1,400 animals at the rescue center comprising primates and

other mammals, reptiles and birds. Most of them were confiscated from their

owners during operations between 2000 and November 2003, but some were

handed over voluntarily.

 

" Our biggest expense is providing food for the carnivores, including four

lions, a Sumatran tiger, four panthers, 20 crocodiles and three wild cats, "

Suyatno said.

 

" Everyday, except Sundays, officers at the rescue center must buy five goats

to feed them, " he said, adding that each animal gets an average of four

kilograms of meat.

 

The officers must also buy a truck full of fruit every two days to feed the

primates and the birds.

 

However, the expense could be reduced if some animals were to be released

back into their native habitats in national parks or conservation centers.

 

Besides the financial constraints, the officers at the rescue center also

suffer from a lack of professional training.

 

" The officers must increase their knowledge of various species. Wild animals

are completely different from cattle. We can easily study goats because we

can breed them but it's difficult to handle rhinos, for instance, because we

rarely see their behavior. Our knowledge of wild animals is very limited, "

Suyatno said.

 

The West Java conservation office hopes that there will be no more wild or

endangered animals being kept by individuals within five years.

 

Michelle Desilets

Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation UK

Buckinghamshire, England

 

 

 

" Primates Helping Primates "

www.savetheorangutan.org.uk

www.savetheorangutan.com

 

 

 

 

 

BT Broadband - Free modem offer, sign up online today and save £80

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...