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Orang-utans set off for a wild new life

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Orang-utans set off for a wild new life Lewis Smith,

Environment Reporter

· The apes will live in a protected area · Thousands are at risk from

logging

 

 

More than a thousand orang-utans are to be released back into the wild as part

of a project to save the species.

The first 90 of the great apes are to be transported early next year from a

rescue centre to a protected area in the heart of Borneo.

 

 

Two valleys, big enough to support 1,150 orang-utans, has been identified by

conservationists as a suitable new home for the endangered animals.

Orang-utans were once common across South-East Asia but are now restricted to

Borneo — where there are an estimated 35,000 to 50,000 — and Sumatra, where

there are about 7,500.

Illegal logging, mining and the rapid expansion of palm oil crops have caused

numbers to drop and the apes are one of the most rapidly declining species in

the world.

Each year an estimated 4,000 to 5,000 orang-utans are killed or made homeless

as rainforest is cleared to make room for palm oil crops.

While many of the animals are beaten or hacked to death, conservationists have

been able to rescue some of the displaced creatures, mainly the young.

Conservationists from the Borneo Orang-utan Survival Foundation UK are now

confident of securing sufficient funding to begin returning the rescued animals

to the wild and intend to transport the first batch in January or February.

The Betikap and Sepathawung valleys have been identified as ideal homes. They

supported large numbers of orang-utans before hunting all but wiped them out.

Both valleys in the Murung Raya district of central Kalimantan are now

protected by law and are big enough to provide food and shelter for 1,150

orang-utans. “They’re ideal for the orang-utan and it’s been approved at every

level of the Indonesian Government,” Michelle Desilets, of the survival

foundation, said.

“A hundred years ago it seems there was a substantial orang-utan population

there, but it has been reduced to just a few by hunters.

“We now have the support of the people in five villages in the area. They will

keep an eye on the orang-utans and support them. In return, the villagers will

get facilities for medical care and schooling.”

The catastrophic fall in ape numbers in Borneo is largely attributed to the

palm oil industry, which is clearing land to make way for the crops. Palm oil,

derived from the fruit of oil palms, is a lucrative crop and is used both in

biofuel and as a cooking oil. In the past 35 years Indonesia is estimated to

have lost more than 100 million acres of forest — and much of it from orang-utan

territory in Borneo.

Of the 1,150 apes to be returned to the wild, 600 already have the skills to

survive unaided and 550 are estimated to require rehabilitation.

Orang-utans rescued by the survival foundation are sent to a 63-hectare

(155-acre) holding centre, where they are treated for injuries and illnesses

before rehabilitation work begins.

Younger animals are taught how to survive in the wild without a mother, while

those too badly injured to cope in the forest are cared for.

The cost to rescue, treat and release a wild orangutan is about $3000 on

average, or £1500.

If you would like to help to give a wild orangutan another chance in the wild,

visit www.savetheorangutan.co.uk.

 

 

Full article can be viewed at:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,25689-2488893,00.html

 

 

Michelle Desilets

BOS UK

www.savetheorangutan.org.uk

" Primates Helping Primates "

 

 

All New Mail – Tired of Vi@gr@! come-ons? Let our SpamGuard protect

you.

 

 

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