Posts tagged borneo.

veganatalie:

mudratmark:

I am now dead.

AHHHHH SO CUTE MY HEART HURTS

omg

Deforestation or Murder? Why Orangutans are Going Extinct ›

therecipe:

“Conservationists have made the orangutan a symbol of what will be lost if we do not halt tropical deforestation. But data tell a more nuanced story. In Kalimantan on the island of Borneo, humans murder so many orangutans each year (on average, between 1,970 and 3,100 annually) that this rate of killing is enough to tip the species towards inexorable extinction. These numbers are part of a new study just published in the journal PLoS One and co-authored by a group of Nature Conservancy scientists, who interviewed almost 7,000 people from 687 villages in Kalimantan.”

mad-as-a-marine-biologist:

preeno:

Soon there will be nothing left…  

(via therecipe)

  June 14, 2011 at 11:00pm
via preeno

debbiejo:

Orangutan habitat has been decreasing, as seen in this map of Borneo by Hugo Ahlenius, UNEP/GRID-Arendal.

Orangutan distribution on Borneo (Indonesia, Malaysia). (2007). In UNEP/GRID-Arendal Maps and Graphics Library. Retrieved March 17, 2011 from http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/orangutan-distribution-on-borneo-indonesia-malaysia.

Not cool guys. Orangutans are the only Asian ape and our not-so-distant cousins.

(via galdikas)

  April 04, 2011 at 05:00am

mabelmoments:

Orphaned orangutans saved from extinction in Borneo jungle

At the Nyaru Menteng centre 47 “babysitters” – women recruited from nearby villages in central Borneo - help care for 650 apes as they move through nursery, Forest School One and Forest School Two before hopefully heading out for a new life in the jungle.

The centre was set up 12 years ago by ­Danish conservationist Lone Dröscher-Nielsen who devised the baby-sitter system of giving the traumatised young orphans the ­unconditional love they need to survive.

… a wheelbarrow of baby orangutans… that’s it, my life is complete

(via theanimalblog)

allcreatures:

A displaced orangutan walking on a road that is part of fresh clearing for palm oil plantation in Sampit district in Central Kalimantan in Borneo island. More than 1,000 captive orangutans set for release into the wild on Borneo island are being sent into a ‘killing field’ of illegal logging and poaching, Baktiantoro said. Indonesia has reserved 86,450 hectares of forest in Muara Wahau, East Kalimantan province, for the rehabilitation of 1,200 captive big apes over the next four years but warned that the endangered mammals were being sent to their deaths unless the government also managed to stop illegal logging and poaching, which is rampant in the region. Photograph: Hardi Baktiantoro/Centre For Orangutan Protection/AFP/Getty Images

This is not how orangutans are supposed to live. They cannot live in these conditions. We are killing our relatives.

Rare scaled mammal threatened by traditional medicine

dream-hope-act:

An unprecedented haul of records from wildlife smugglers in Borneo has revealed the scale of the illegal trade in pangolins. They show that between May 2007 and December 2008, the smugglers bought at least 22,200 endangered Sunda pangolins, or spiny anteaters, and nearly a tonne of their scales, for export.

By contrast, local police seized only 654 illegally shipped pangolins between 2001 and 2008. A report on the smugglers’ records from Traffic, the group that monitors wildlife trade for the International Union for Conservation of Nature(IUCN), says that this “raises serious concerns for the continued survival of the species”.

“Most of what we know about the trafficking of pangolins is from seizures, and it has always been recognised that this is probably the tip of the iceberg,” says Elizabeth John, a Traffic spokesperson in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The smugglers’ records reveal the size of the iceberg. “This is why these logbooks are so valuable. It shows you what enforcement agencies are grappling with.”

Pangolins, the only scaled mammal known, are prized for their scales: according to Chinese traditional medicine, they boost circulation and treat a plethora of illnesses including asthma, menstrual and lactation disorders, and arthritis. “Scales are ground into a powder or worn like a locket, as a talisman,” says John. The animal’s meat is also supposed to have medicinal properties.

Endangered exports

Populations of all eight pangolin species are decreasingCITES, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, has banned exports of all four Asian species since 2000; two, the Chinese pangolin and the Sunda pangolin, were listed as endangered in the IUCN’s Red List in 2008, making all international trade in them or their parts illegal.

Yet Traffic reports that Chinese demand has made pangolins among the most common illegally traded wildlife in Asia, while shipments of African pangolins, until now spared this pressure, have recently been seized in China. China was also the probable destination of the pangolins listed in the smugglers’ records.

Traffic says wildlife officials in the Malaysian state of Sabah, where the records were seized, have too little money even to fuel their patrol boats to pursue smuggling vessels.

Meanwhile, hunters told Traffic that it is very difficult for them to stop hunting, because catching the animals is so easy – its only defence is to curl into a scaly ball – and because they sell for around $160 per animal. The smugglers recorded spending $3.4 million – $5700 per day – for pangolins in the seized records. Their profits were not recorded, but Traffic says they were probably “quite high”.

Source : New Scientist

Why do people do this? 

(via theepicspaceodyssey-deactivated)