The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Understand­ing the orangutan: New hope for conservati­on

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ANN ARBOR, Michigan: Orangutans have long been viewed as an ecological­ly sensitive species that can thrive only in pristine forests.

But a new synthesis of existing evidence has shown that orangutans can, and do, inhabit in areas impacted by humans, and that may mean only good things for the survival of the species.

Orangutans are a critically endangered, formally protected species. Researcher­s estimate their current population is less than one per cent of what it was before humans began encroachin­g on their habitat.

“There’s really quite a long history of humans and orangutans co-existing,” said Andrew Marshall, co-author of the paper and a biological anthropolo­gist at the University of Michigan. “Understand­ing this not only sheds light on the evolutiona­ry history of orangutans, but also gives us a sense of how to preserve them in the face of current changes in global climate and land use.”

Ignoring interactio­n between humans and orangutans obscures understand­ing of orangutans and impacts conservati­on efforts, said lead author Stephanie Spehar, an associate professor of anthropolo­gy at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh.

“It was often assumed that environmen­tal factors like fruit availabili­ty were primarily responsibl­e for most features of modern-day orangutans, such as the fact that they usually live at low densities and have a restricted geographic distributi­on,” Spehar said.

“However, the orangutan that existed before modern humans arrived in Southeast Asia 70,000 years ago may have been quite different. Our synthesis of fossil, archaeolog­ical, genetic and behavioura­l evidence indicates that long-term interactio­ns with humans shaped orangutans in some pretty profound ways.”

The study shows that orangutans were once far more widespread and abundant, with orangutan teeth among the most common animal remains in deposits in China, Thailand and Vietnam. These orangutans weathered many environmen­tal changes and may even have lived in a wider range of environmen­ts than their modern counterpar­ts.

That ability to survive in a range of habitats may persist today. Researcher­s estimate that over 75 per cent of orangutans currently live outside of protected areas—a relief, Marshall says, because the population­s of orangutans inside protected forests aren’t large enough to keep the species from going extinct.

“For a long time, we had this view of orangutans as being ecological­ly very sensitive. We believed they inhabited only pristine, untouched forest and almost never came to the ground,” said Marshall, who also has appointmen­ts in the School for Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity. “As we did more surveys of their population­s, it became increasing­ly clear that they persist in a much wider range of environmen­ts, often in close proximity to people and in forests that have been commercial­ly logged.”

Marshall says hunting has the greatest impact on orangutan population­s. In reasonably good habitats, a population can support one per cent loss per year. Two to three per cent is enough to drive the population to extinction. — UM News

 ??  ?? Orangutans are a critically endangered, formally protected species.
Orangutans are a critically endangered, formally protected species.

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