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| Bornean
Orangutan |
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| Common
Name: |
orangutan,
orang-utan |
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| Class:
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Mammalia |
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| Order: |
Primate |
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| Family:
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Pongidae |
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| Genus
species: |
Pongo
(gorilla/orangutan) pygmaeus (small, dwarfish) pygmaeus |
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| Fast
Facts |
| Description:
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The
only great ape from Asia; formerly two subspecies: Bornean (P.
p. pygmaeus) has a round face with dark red coat; Sumatran (P.
p. Abelii), which has now been elevated to a full species has
a long narrow face with paler longer hair. Adult males of both species
have large cheek flaps. |
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| Size:
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Males
= 0.97 m (3.2 ft)
Female = 0.78 m (2.6 ft) |
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| Weight: |
Males
= 90 kg (198 lbs)
Females = 50 kg (110 lbs) |
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| Diet:
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60%
fruit and other plant materials including leaves, bark, flowers, and
nuts, occasionally insects and small mammals |
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| Gestation:
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260
to 270 days |
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| Sexual
maturity: |
7-10
years |
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| Life
span: |
Up to
50 years |
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| Range: |
Borneo |
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| Habitat:
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Primary
lowland swamp and primary rainforest |
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| Population: |
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| Status:
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Listed
as endangered by USFWS and protected by CITES Appendix I |
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| Fun
Facts |
| 1. |
Unlike
other great apes, orangutans are solitary by nature; this may be related
to their need for large quantities of fruit, which are dispersed throughout
the forest. |
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| 2. |
Even
though they are able to walk upright for short distances, orangutans
travel mostly by brachiating (swinging from one branch to another
by the arms) through trees, using well-worn corridors in the forest
canopy. |
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| 3. |
Orangutans
shelter themselves from rain and sun by holding leafy branches over
their heads, and when constructing a night nest in the trees, will
sometimes add a leafy roof. |
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| 4. |
Males
have a large throat sac that helps them make "long calls."
This travels for up to 1 km (.62 mile) through dense vegetation, which
helps the males define territories. The "squeak-kiss" noise
they make is a sign of annoyance. |
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| 5. |
Bornean
orangs have the most prolonged development of any mammal therefore
they reproduce very slowly. |
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| 6. |
Orangs
are unable to swim. In rain, they construct a leaf nest to keep dry. |
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| 7. |
The
differences between monkeys and apes are easy to see once you know
what to look for. Apes do not have a tail and are generally larger
than most other primates. They have a more upright body posture as
well. Apes rely more on vision than on smell and have a short broad
nose rather than a snout, as Old World monkeys do. Apes have a larger
brain relative to the body size than other primates do. |
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| Ecology
and Conservation |
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Primarily
fruit and plant eaters, orangutans play an essential role as seed
dispersers throughout the forests of Indonesia as they digest and
eliminate waste. They choose select green leaves and shoots, and
in doing so act as pruners that aid in regenerating plant growth.
The small food patches in Bornean forests, which cannot support
more than one orangutan, force them to remain solitary or semi-solitary,
and limits their social interactions.
Uncontrolled
increases in human populations in Southeast Asia have reduced the
range and numbers of orangutans. Much of their habitat is either
clear cut for agriculture or lumber production. Clear-cutting exposes
coal, which makes the area susceptible to fires. The capture and
sale of baby orangutans is also a worldwide problem. This practice
continues despite the many government and non-government organizations
created to eliminate the exploitation of endangered wildlife.
The
natural habitats of the orangutan, primarily the tropical forests
of Borneo and Sumatra, have diminished significantly in recent years.
As a result of widespread habitat destruction and hunting, the Bornean
orangutan has become an endangered species.
Busch
Gardens provides funding for a conservation project focusing on
the population status and habitats in multiple-use forests in Malaysia.
The study is intended to collect data necessary to plan for long-term
conservation of the orangutan. Research is being conducted in a
remote region of Lower Kinabatangan of Sabah, Malaysia, where a
patchwork of virgin and exploited forests is home to high concentrations
of orangutans and other rare species.
Understanding
the relationship of orangutans to their environment is a first step
in developing sound conservation strategies for this species in
an increasingly threatened environment.
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| Bibliography |
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Bond,
Melanie. 2000. National Zoo Personnel Committee. Apes Conference.
Chicago, IL. May, 2000.
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Galdikas,
Birute M. F. Reflections of Eden. Canada: Little, Brown &
Company, 1995. |
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Goodall,
J., Fossey, D., Galdiras, B., and S. Montgomery. 1991. Walking
with the Great Apes. Houghton Mifflin. Boston, MS.
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Napier,
J.R. and P.H. The Natural History of the Primates. Cambridge:
MIT Press, 1985. |
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Nowak,
Ronald M. (ed.). Walkers Mammals of the World. Vol. I. Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991. |
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Parker,
S. (ed.). Grizmeks Encyclopedia of Mammals. Vol. II. New York:
McGraw-Hill Publishing Co.,1990. |
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Preston-Mafham,
Ken and Rod. Primates of the World. London: Blandford Publishing,
1992. |
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Rowe,
Noel. The Pictorial Guide to the Living Primates. East Hampton,
New York: Pogonias Press, 1996. |
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Tuttle,
Russell H. Apes of the World: Their Social Behavior, Communication,
Mentality and Ecology. New Jersey: Noyes Publications, 1986. |
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Orangutan
Foundation International. www.ns.net/orangutan/. January 25, 2001.
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