04 Dec
2006 - Pontianak, Indonesia – Drastic habitat
reduction, poaching and the illegal pet trade
have left the world’s largest population of western
Bornean orang-utans facing local extinction unless
immediate protection measures are taken, a WWF
survey finds.
The survey reveals that about
1,030 western Bornean orang-utan (Pongo pygmaeus
pygmaeus) — out of an estimated population of
4,800 throughout Borneo — are found in and around
Indonesia's Betung Kerihun National Park.
"The western Bornean orang-utan
is the most threatened of the three Bornean orang-utan
subspecies to start with," said Albertus
Tjiu, WWF-Indonesia's Species Officer in West
Kalimantan.
"This orang-utan population
at Betung needs protection now to make sure it
doesn't go extinct.”
In addition, the survey reveals
that a significant number of these western Bornean
orang-utans are found outside the park, particularly
in forests used by the local population for various
purposes, making those individuals especially
vulnerable to exploitation and habitat loss.
Specific actions to boost protection
of this population includes the enforcement of
a zero-hunting policy inside the park, increasing
the size of protected forests in the Embaloh River
watershed area and the creation of a transborder
protected area.
In particular, WWF and its partners
are calling for the establishment of a forest
corridor linking the two protected populations
within Betung Kerihun and the neighboring park,
Danau Sentarum, as a crucial action to secure
the long-term survival of this subspecies in Borneo.
These parks are located in the
Heart of Borneo, a trans-boundary conservation
initiative involving the governments of Brunei,
Indonesia and Malaysia that that aims to conserve
and sustainably manage one of the most important
centers of biological diversity in the world
“The Indonesian government is
committed to the protection of the orang-utan
population and its habitat and will work with
all stakeholders to create synergy for the effectiveness
of orang-utan conservation,” said Adi Susmianto,
Indonesia Forestry Ministry's biodiversity conservation
director.
END NOTES:
• The orang-utan survey was
conducted by WWF-Indonesia, together with Indonesia's
Ministry of Forestry (PHKA), local NGOs and local
villagers, with the technical assistance of the
Kinabatangan Orang-utan Conservation Project.
The work included interviews with local villagers,
map analysis, habitat assessment and a census
along transects in the forest.
• The Bornean orang-utan is
today recognized as a different species from its
Sumatra relative. There are three subspecies of
Boreneon organg-utan: Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus,
P.p. morio, and P. p. wurmbii. The first two are
found in West Kalimantan, Indonesia, and Sarawak,
Malaysia, and the last one is found in East Kalimantan
and Sabah.
• Located in West Kalimantan’s
Kapuas Hulu district, Betung Kerihun National
Park was declared a national park in 1995 and
covers an area of approximately 800,000km2. The
Danau Sentarum National Park, a huge wetland and
swamp forest area, 60km south of Betung Kerihun,
is home to a significant number of orang-utans,
but the general population appears to be highly
fragmented and the forest are in very bad condition
due to fires, agricultural development and illegal
logging.