Sumatran orangutans spend most of their lives in the canopy. When it’s gone, so are they. Please help restore forests for orangutans.
Northern Sumatra is an important refuge for orangutans. Over time, they have retreated here, to one of the largest continuous expanses of lowland for remaining in all of Asia. As the forests fell elsewhere to oil palm plantations, mining, dams, and expanding infrastructure, orangutans retreated to habitable places.
Now this important region is at a crossroads, threatened by the same exploitation that destroyed other habitat. Compounded by poaching and climate change.
Human actions here have created a substantial barrier to movement that cuts deep into the entire ecosystem. Fragmented forests are losing species unable to cross the degraded landscapes.
Human-wildlife conflicts are on the rise at an alarming rate, with deadly results. Orangutans are being taken from the forest and kept as pets by nearby villagers.
Orangutans live in an incredible world. Within their forests are 174 species of mammals, 450 bird species, 191 reptile species, 52 amphibian species, and over 4,500 plant species. Among the species that share the forest with orangutans are other primates including leaf-monkeys, slow loris (Nycticebus coucang), long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis), pig-tailed macaques (M. nemestrina), and siamangs (Hylobates syndactylus).
Many of these species live nowhere else on earth. According to the World Heritage Convention, at least 92 endemic species live within the boundaries of the Leuser ecosystem, one of the few homes left for orangutans.
Although rich in biodiversity, the forests are disappearing, and with them the orangutans. In fact, there are now less than 7,500 Sumatran orangutans left in the wild. And they are not alone – other extremely rare species are holding on for life here.
Among the rarest of them all are wild Sumatran rhinos, which have dwindled to less than 80 individuals. Wild Sumatran elephants have been reduced to only 2,400 – 2,800 individuals.
With insatiable demand on the black market for tusks, horns, feathers, skins, and other body parts used in traditional medicine, cultural rituals, and decorative arts, species are moving closer to extinction.
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