Times of Suriname

Drastic decrease in Borneo’s orangutan population

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BORNEO - The number of orangutans on the island of Borneo has more than halved in 16 years, as hunting of the critically endangered species continues and rampant deforestat­ion destroys its habitat, scientists say. An article published in Current Biology found the population had declined by more than 148,000 between 1999 and 2015, leaving an estimated 70,000 to 100,000 on the Southeast Asian island. The study projected a further drop of 45,000 from deforestat­ion alone by 2050 if nothing changes, in a grim forecast for the great ape’s future. Orangutans exist on only two islands -- Sumatra in Indonesia and Borneo, which is shared by Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei. Indonesia and Malaysia have for decades struggled to curb deforestat­ion and illegal logging, losing swaths of tropical forest to palm oil and paper plantation­s, as well as mining, destroying crucial orangutan habitat. The study found, however, that the steepest declines were not from land clearance, but in forests that were fully intact or only partly logged. “We found that around 70% of the total loss occurs in primary forest areas or selectivel­y logged forests, so the only explanatio­n is that they are being hunted by people,” said Serge Wich, a scientist in the team from the Liverpool John Moores University. The researcher­s’ findings were based on ground and aerial surveys of orangutan nests in 38 separate population­s and satellite imagery. Wich explained that hunters on Borneo who enter forests in search of pigs and other animals might kill an orangutan if they come across one. Orangutans are also often forced to pass plantation­s to move between forested areas and are regularly killed by humans as they do. Some farmers consider them pests that threaten their crops while others shoot them out of fear. Wich warned that with further declines forecast, orangutan population­s would likely be confined to a few small protected national parks if action isn’t taken. “The first step is that the conservati­on community and the government­s in Indonesia and Malaysia need to really recognize that hunting and killing is a major issue that is going to need a lot of attention very quickly,” he said. The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature lists the Bornean orangutan as critically endangered and found its population decreased by more than 60% between 1950 and 2010. It projects a 82% population drop between 1950 and 2025. The Sumatran orangutan is also critically endangered, with only 13,846 individual­s left, according to the IUCN. A third species, the critically endangered Tapanuli orangutan, was discovered last year in Sumatra with a population of less than 800.

(CNN)

 ??  ?? Young orphan Orangutans are taken in at night, at the Nyaru Menteng Rehabilita­tion Centre. (Photo: Christian Aslund)
Young orphan Orangutans are taken in at night, at the Nyaru Menteng Rehabilita­tion Centre. (Photo: Christian Aslund)

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