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Orang-utan rescue in the heart of Borneo

 

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PoorBest Written by Jikkie Jonkman, WWF

Monday, 13 June 2005

 

An orang-utan in Sebangau National Park, Borneo,

Indonesia © WWF

Beethoven flatly refuses to come down from his nest

high up in the trees. He’s been sitting up there for

more than an hour eating some fruit, barely paying

attention to his many adorning fans down below on the

ground. Beethoven is a Borneo orang-utan and is used

to visitors coming to his home at the recently

protected Sebangau National Park, located in the

southern part of Indonesia’s Central Kalimantan

Province on the island of Borneo. His movements are

also being meticulously watched by researchers,

dedicated to the conservation of this threatened

species whose forest habitat is being destroyed at a

rapid rate throughout Southeast Asia.

 

“We are studying this ape species to see what effect

deforestation is having on its population,” said

primate expert Simon Husson.

 

 

The British biologist and his wife have spent the last

ten years living in an Indonesian peat forest slightly

larger than the greater London area to study

orang-utans as part of the Orang-utan Tropical

Peatland Project (OuTrop), an independent research and

conservation project.

 

“When we first came here in 1995 there were still

about 13,000 orang-utans,” Husson added. “But as a

result of intensive logging their habitat has shrunk

and they have ended up packed together in this small

area. Luckily, the population still living in the

forest seems to be managing.”

 

Today, there are about 6,900 orang-utans in Sebangau

National Park, one of the largest known populations.

 

Shrinking forests

Miriam van Gool, responsible for global programmes and

policy at WWF in the Netherlands, has been involved

with the orang-utan project in Sebangau from the

start. The first time she visited the area, about

three years ago, the situation was in dire straits.

Boats were towing rafts of illegally-felled logs on

the Sebangau River and endless stacks of logs lay

awaiting transport.

 

Why invest in an area that looked like it was already

under an environmental death sentence?

 

“The region is sick but not dead yet,” explained van

Gool. “Sebangau and the neighbouring region of Mawas

have extremely important peat bog forests and

orang-utan populations. A great deal of them can still

be saved.”

 

According to WWF, there are about 10,000 orang-utans

living between Sebangau and Mawas, about one-fifth of

the world’s orang-utan population. Thanks to the work

of van Gool and others, Sebangau was declared a

national park last October in a last ditch effort to

save the forests and their inhabitants.

 

With a current deforestation rate of 1.3 million

hectares per year – an area equivalent to about one

third of the size of Switzerland – the rate is likely

to rise due to pressure from a growing domestic

population and the needs of international markets.

 

" The consequences of this scale of deforestation will

not only result in a major loss of species but also

disrupt water supplies and reduce future economic

opportunities, such as tourism, and subsistence for

local communities, " said Dr Chris Elliott, Director of

WWF’s Global Forest Programme.

 

One of the main problems the Sebangau area has been

facing is the destruction of fragile peat forests,

particularly as a result of loggers digging wide

channels to tow away logs during the rainy season.

Because of increased drainage, the peat forest is

drying out and is more prone to forest fires during

the dry season.

 

Peat forests are found in parts of Africa and South

America, and in large areas of Southeast Asia,

especially Borneo and Sumatra. These swamp forests

appear in places where dead vegetation becomes

waterlogged and accumulates as peat, which acts as a

sort of sponge that withholds moisture at times of

little rainfall and absorbs monsoon rains. When peat

swamp forests are drained for logging purposes or

agricultural projects, they become highly susceptible

to combustion. Under the dry el Niño conditions of

1997-98 thousands of fires raged throughout the peat

swamps of Indonesia.

 

WWF, together with the local government and other

organizations, including OuTrop and Wetlands

International, has begun to close the canals with dams

to control the damage.

 

“We hope this will decrease the chances of forest

fires in this area and at the same time protect the

orang-utans habitat,” van Gool said.

 

Orang-utan rescue

Orang-utan, which means “the human of the forest” in

the Malay language, is truly a remarkable animal. With

only about 55,000 found on the islands of Sumatra and

Borneo, its natural habitat has become fragmented or

disappeared altogether as result of logging, forest

fires, and the conversion of forest lands into

commercial oil palm plantations. If that wasn’t

enough, the species has fallen victim to the growing

and profitable illegal wildlife trade.

 

Orang-utans are protected in Indonesia, but many are

still kept illegally as pets. According to TRAFFIC,

the wildlife trade monitoring network – a joint

programme of WWF and IUCN-The World Conservation Union

– about twenty orang-utans are traded each month from

the Indonesian part of Borneo. Some are sold for as

low as US$45.

 

If a caged animal is lucky enough to be rescued, it

will go to one of the island’s many animals

sanctuaries, like the Nyaru Menteng, a centre run by

the Borneo Orang-utan Survival (BOS) Foundation in

Indonesia’s central Kalimantan region.

 

“Our rescue teams are removing more and more young

orphans as forests are being cut down to make room for

palm oil plantations,” said BOS spokesman Jo-lan van

Leeuwen, as her favourite ape, Tara, crawled on her

lap.

 

“In the absence of forest the orang-utans tend to stay

near the plantations where they eat the young oil palm

shoots, but it’s not enough for them to live on,” she

added.

 

“What’s more, they’re often killed by plantation

owners because they destroy the young trees or take

the young ones off to the villages to keep as pets or

to sell them. Fortunately, we manage to find some of

the animals before they end up being trafficked.”

 

It is impossible to walk across the grounds of Nyaru

Menteng and not be endeared by the orphaned

orang-utans. A group of about twenty of the

nappy-wearing apes are looked after by surrogate

females, and women from the nearby village work shifts

to tend after the little ones 24 hours a day.

 

“Without maternal care these babies are doomed,” van

Leeuwen added. “We are trying to rear them before

returning them to the wild. Visitors to this part of

the sanctuary are not allowed so that they don’t get

too accustomed to people.”

 

For many of the orphans, it was people that got them

into trouble in the first place. Take Kesi, for

example, whose mother was killed on an oil palm

plantation, probably with machetes as Kesi is missing

a hand. The wound healed before she was found, but she

would have starved without help. Even more shocking is

the story of Pony, a female who spent eight years in a

‘brothel village’ where crime and lawlessness go

together. She was found chained, shaved, and abused.

 

“We have nothing to indicate that sexual abuse of

orang-utans is happening systematically,” van Leeuwen

said.

 

" Pony’s case seems to be exceptional, but the

increasing flow of animals from plantations is

certainly disturbing.”

 

With all one’s heart

The figures available about the growing number of oil

palm plantations do nothing to allay fears. Quit the

contrary, in fact. A recent WWF report – Treasure

island at risk – shows that there are about 2.5

million hectares of oil palm plantations in Borneo,

and that more forest land is expected to be cleared to

make room for more. It also reveals that, although

banned, logging is still frequent in the national

parks of Kalimantan. If the plans of companies and

local government are anything to go on, that area

could grow in the coming years to ten million hectares

– about one-seventh of the whole of Borneo.

 

All this is more than enough reason for organizations

like WWF to get involved. Through the newly created

‘Heart of Borneo’ initiative – a huge transboundary

initiative to conserve one of the last remaining

frontier forests – the global conservation

organization aims to assist Borneo’s three nations

(Brunei, Indonesia and Malaysia) to conserve

220,000km2 of equatorial rainforest through a network

of protected areas and sustainably-managed forests.

 

“Borneo is undoubtedly one of the most important

centres of biodiversity in the world,” said Dr Mubariq

Ahmad, Executive Director of WWF-Indonesia.

 

“By acting now, we can ensure that the heart of Borneo

remains a haven for both well-known and newly

discovered species.”

 

The protection of the Heart of Borneo would not only

benefit wildlife like orang-utans, but also help

alleviate poverty by increasing water and food

security, and cultural survival for the people of

Borneo. In the long term, it will save the island from

the ultimate threat of deforestation and increased

impacts from droughts and fires.

 

Comments

 

 

 

 

Michelle Desilets

BOS UK

www.savetheorangutan.org.uk

www.savetheorangutan.info

" Primates Helping Primates "

 

Please sign our petition to rescue over 100 smuggled orangutans in Thailand:

http://www.thePetitionSite.com/takeaction/822035733

 

 

 

 

 

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