Source: Agencies |
2008-7-6 |
NEWSPAPER EDITION
ENDANGERED orangutans could become the first great ape to become extinct if urgent action isn't taken to protect the species from human encroachment in Southeast Asia, a new study says.
The number of orangutans in Indonesia and Malaysia has declined sharply since 2004, mostly because of illegal logging and the expansion of palm oil plantations, said Serge Wich, a scientist at the Great Ape Trust in the US state of Iowa yesterday.
A recent survey by Wich and his 15 colleagues found the orangutan population on Indonesia's Sumatra island has dropped nearly 14 percent since 2004 to 6,600. No giant apes were found in parts of Aceh province.
The study - which appears in this month's peer-reviewed science journal Oryx - discovered the population on Malaysia's Borneo island has fallen 10 percent to 49,600 apes.
"It's disappointing that there are still declines even though there have been quite a lot of conservation efforts over the past 30 years," Wich said.
The orangutan losses on Borneo were occurring at an "alarming rate," and researchers described the situation on Sumatra as a "rapid decline."
"Unless extraordinary efforts are made soon, it could become the first great ape species to go extinct," the researchers wrote.
The study is the latest in a line of research that has predicted the demise of orangutans, which are only found in Indonesia and Malaysia.
In May, the Center for Orangutan Protection said just 20,000 of the endangered primates remain in the tropical jungle of Central Kalimantan on Borneo island, down from 31,300 in 2004. Based on that estimate it concluded orangutans there could be extinct by 2011.
Michelle Desilets, director of the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation UK, praised the new study as a comprehensive look at the orangutan population.
CHINA'S foreign trade with members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) amounted to US$54.4 billion in the first quarter of this year, a growth of 26 percent on the same period of last year, sources...
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