Los Angeles Times

New orangutan species joins family tree

Tapanuli, found in Indonesia, bring to eight the number of great ape species.

- KAREN KAPLAN karen.kaplan@latimes.com

Hello Pongo tapanulien­sis, and welcome to the family!

As of this week, these orangutans are being recognized as a distinct species of great ape. That brings to eight the number of great ape species alive today.

Two of the others are also orangutans (Sumatran and Bornean). Another two are gorillas (eastern and western). Then there are chimpanzee­s and their close relatives, bonobos. And finally, there’s us.

P. tapanulien­sis may be the newest member of our family tree, but they may not last long. Fewer than 800 of them are left in their native Indonesia, and unless conservati­on measures are taken soon, they could succumb to threats such as habitat loss and inbreeding.

Read on to learn more about your fellow great apes. If you’re not keen on their scientific name, you can call them Tapanuli orangutans.

How was this species discovered?

It began with an unfortunat­e encounter in November 2013 between a male orangutan and a group of villagers in the South Tapanuli District of North Sumatra. The orangutan sustained mortal injuries in the “orangutan-human conflict,” according to a report published Thursday in the journal Current Biology.

After the animal’s death, scientists studied its skull and compared it with 34 other adult male orangutans. They found enough difference­s to convince them that the Tapanuli orangutan represente­d a separate species.

What makes it different?

It has a smaller skull, a shallower face and a more angled facial profile. Its eye sockets and mouth are narrower, among more than a dozen other small but significan­t physical difference­s cited in the Current Biology report.

The report authors also wrote that the call of male Tapanuli orangutans sets them apart from other orangutans. Their “long call” has a higher maximum frequency, which makes for a higher pitch. It also lasts longer (more than 111 seconds is typical, compared with less than 90 seconds for Bornean orangutans) and contains more “pulses” that are delivered at a higher rate.

How can you tell them apart?

If their overall appearance were drasticall­y different, perhaps they would have been recognized as a distinct species before now. They look more like Sumatran orangutans in some respects and more like Bornean orangutans in others.

The scientists noted that Tapanuli orangutans have a “linear body build” like their Sumatran cousins, but with frizzier hair.

The males have large, flat cheek pads known as flanges that bear a closer resemblanc­e to those of Bornean orangutans. However, female Tapanuli orangutans have beards, while female Bornean orangutans do not.

How are the three species related?

DNA evidence from 37 orangutans suggests that the common ancestor of all living orangutans came from mainland Asia to Southeast Asia, arriving in an area of Sumatra south of present-day Lake Toba. The Tapanuli orangutans are direct descendant­s of these pioneers.

About 3.4 million years ago, some of those early orangutans moved north of Lake Toba, becoming the ancestors of the Sumatran orangutans.

Then, about 675,000 years ago, another group from south of Lake Toba split off, becoming the ancestors of the Bornean orangutans.

Even after these ancestral groups split off, there continued to be some genetic mixing between the Sumatran and Tapanuli orangutans until about 10,000 to 20,000 years ago, when habitat loss left the Tapanuli species completely isolated from the others.

How long will the species survive?

That’s unclear. With fewer than 800 left, the Tapanuli orangutans are the smallest of the three species. In fact, they are smaller than any other species of great ape. That includes the critically endangered Mountain gorillas, a subspecies of Eastern gorillas, according to the Sumatran Orangutan Conservati­on Programme.

The study authors fear that the population could get even smaller. Humans hunt them, kill them to protect crops and capture them for trade, they wrote. They also destroy the animals’ habitat in the Batang Toru forest by clearing trees and building roads.

A proposal to build a hydroelect­ric plant could deprive them of up to 8% of their remaining range, the researcher­s noted.

“A combinatio­n of small population size and geographic isolation is of particular high conservati­on concern, as it may lead to inbreeding,” they wrote. The DNA of two Tapanuli orangutans contains signatures of recent inbreeding, they added.

“To ensure long-term survival of P. tapanulien­sis, conservati­on measures need to be implemente­d swiftly,” they wrote.

 ?? Andrew Walmsley Los Angeles Times ?? WITH THEIR smaller skulls and linear body build, P. tapanulien­sis, or Tapanuli orangutans, are a distinct species of great ape. But unless conservati­on measures are taken, the fewer than 800 left in their native Indonesia may succumb to human threats...
Andrew Walmsley Los Angeles Times WITH THEIR smaller skulls and linear body build, P. tapanulien­sis, or Tapanuli orangutans, are a distinct species of great ape. But unless conservati­on measures are taken, the fewer than 800 left in their native Indonesia may succumb to human threats...

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