The Sumatran species is critically endangered and the Bornean species of orangutans is endangered according to the IUCN Red List of mammals, and both are listed on Appendix I of CITES. The total number of Bornean orangutans is estimated to be less than 14 percent of what it was in the recent past (from around 10,000 years ago until the middle of the twentieth century) and this sharp decline has occurred mostly over the past few decades due to human activities and development. Species distribution is now highly patchy throughout Borneo: it is apparently absent or uncommon in the south-east of the island, as well as in the forests between the Rejang River in central Sarawak and the Padas River in western Sabah (including the Sultanate of Brunei). The largest remaining population is found in the forest around theSabangau River, but this environment is at risk. A similar development have been observed for the Sumatran orangutans.
A 2007 study by the Government of Indonesia noted in 2004 it was estimated that there was a total wild population of 61234 orangutans, 54567 of which were found on the island of Borneo. The table below shows a breakdown of the species and subspecies and their estimated populations from the report:
Scientific name | Common name | Region | Estimated number |
Pongo abelii | Sumatran Orangutan | Sumatra | 6,667 |
Pongo pygmaeus | Bornean Orangutan | Borneo | |
P. p. morio | Northeast Bornean Orangutan | Sabah | 11,017 |
P. p. morio | Northeast Bornean Orangutan | East Kalimantan | 4,825 |
P. p. wurmbii | Central Bornean Orangutan | Central Kalimantan | >31,300 |
P. p. pygmaeus | Northwest Bornean Orangutan | West Kalimantan and Sarawak | 7,425 |
This indicates a decline from some estimates between 2000 and 2003 which found 7,300 Sumatran Orangutan individuals in the wild and between 45,000 and 69,000 Bornean Orangutans. Thousands of orangutans don't reach adulthood due to human disruption. Orangutans are killed for food while others are killed because of disruption in people's property. Mother orangutans are killed so their infants can be sold as pets. Many of the infants die without the help of their mother. Since recent trends are steeply down in most places due to logging and burning, it is forecast that the current numbers are below these figures.
Orangutan habitat destruction due to logging, mining and forest fires, as well as fragmentation by roads, has been increasing rapidly in the last decade. A major factor in that period of time has been the conversion of vast areas of tropical forest to oil palm plantations in response to international demand (the palm oil is used for cooking, cosmetics, mechanics, and more recently as source of biodiesel). Some UN scientists believe that these plantations could lead to irreparable damage to orangutan habitat by the year 2012. Some of this activity is illegal, occurring in national parks that are officially off limits to loggers, miners and plantation development. There is also a major problem with hunting and illegal pet trade. In early 2004 about 100 individuals of Bornean origin were confiscated in Thailand and 50 of them were returned to Kalimantan in 2006. Several hundred Bornean orangutan orphans who were confiscated by local authorities have been entrusted to different orphanages in both Malaysia and Indonesia. They are in the process of being rehabilitated into the wild.
Conservation centres and organisations
information from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orangutan
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