-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [evol-psych] Organgutan numbers plummeting worldwide; species
may vanish in ten years
Date: Tue, 27 Feb 2001 06:49:27 -0000
From: "Ian Pitchford" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "Ian Pitchford" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: http://www.human-nature.com/darwin/index.html
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 26 FEBRUARY 2001
Wildlife Conservation Society
http://www.wcs.org/

Organgutan numbers plummeting worldwide; species may vanish in ten
years, study
says

NEW YORK -- The orangutan - the only great ape found in Asia - may
vanish fromthe wild within a decade, unless illegal logging of its
habitat and poaching can be greatly reduced, according to research
funded by the Bronx Zoo-based
Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).

The study, which appears in the current issue of the journal Oryx,
documentsthe tremendous decline in orangutans throughout their range.
The Leuser Ecosystem in northern Sumatra, Indonesia, which supported
12,000 orangutans in1993 -- the largest population in the world -- lost
nearly half its
animals over a seven year period. In 1998 and 1999, losses occurred at
around 1,000animals per year.

"The alarming decline in Leuser's orangutan numbers implies that the
world'slargest natural orangutan population will be extinct in a decade
or so, unlessthe current trend is stopped," said the study's lead
author, Dr. Carel
vanSchaik, a WCS research associate from Duke University who has
studied wild orangutans for more than 20 years.

Ironically, the Leuser Ecosystem includes Sumatra's largest protected
area,Leuser National Park, where rampant logging is backed by the
Indonesian
military and police. "All remaining forests that are accessible by road
or river are subject to a seemingly unstoppable pandemic of illegal
logging,regardless of their protection status," van Schaik said.

Van Schaik found that orangutan densities decreased more than 60 percent
in areas that have been selectively logged, due mostly to a decline in
trees that produce fruit - a critical food source for orangutans - as
well as the
loss of canopy trees they use for travel. The rampant illegal logging
that inevitably follows selective cutting in Leuser and other areas, has
caused
densities to drop as much as 90 percent. Many areas are subsequently
turned into massive agricultural estates, and therefore do not
regenerate into
forest.

"Unfortunately, selective logging is rarely followed by the 30-to-40
year rest period prescribed by law. Instead, timber removal continues,
illegally
now, until just about all of the timber-sized trees of commercially
valuable species are gone," van Schaik said. The situation in Borneo,
the only other island where orangutans are found, is no better. Up to
one third of Borneo's
orangutans died during the wave of forest fires that swept through the
area in 1997-98. And a similar rash of illegal logging continues to
affect the region -- all fueled by the state of political instability
throughout Indonesia.

To alleviate this desperate situation, WCS is calling for a moratorium
on logging in old-growth forests until the political situation has
stabilized, as well as renewed commitment to national parks.
Conservation groups have pledged their support of government initiatives
to improve protection, and work with
local communities and governments to stop illegal logging.

"The documented, long-term decline in orangutan numbers is both
depressing and a call to action. We applaud the U.S. Government for its
leadership in providing 1.5 million dollars in emergency aid for
orangutan conservation in
the coming fiscal year, and for the establishment of a fund, under the
Great Apes Conservation Act of 2000, which will provide financial
assistance in years
to come. But tough changes in natural resource management, and
protection of remaining habitat, are equally as critical to ensuring a
future for the orangutan," said Josh Ginsberg, WCS director for Asia
Programs.

Leuser orangutans differ from their Bornean counterparts in having
higher densities, and a tendency toward more social behavior. Van Schaik
has documented routine use of at least two kinds of feeding tools to
extract honey
from tree holes and seeds from a woody fruit protected by stinging
hairs. The geographical distribution of this tool use implies that it is
handed down to generations, similar to what occurs among certain
chimpanzee populations. Conservation efforts should therefore strive to
preserve multiple populations
in both Sumatra and Borneo or this culture will be lost.

"The study of wild orangutans provides us with a unique window on the
kinds of conditions that favored origins of human culture. Losing the
wild orangutan would forever close that window. If we act now, we can
still save enough populations from oblivion, but we cannot afford to
waste any time," van Schaik
said.

http://www.eurekalert.org/news.pub.page2.html



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