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Orangutans Are Fighting for Their Lives
WILDLIFE - MAMMALS
Written by Lucy Brake   
Saturday, 26 February 2011 00:00

Orangutans Are Fighting for Their Lives

Male Orangutan Smile

 

About Carbon and Greenhouse Gases


The orangutan has evolved in perfect harmony with the forest and it is the only world this magnificent creature knows. As humans fight for the resources contained within the forest, these animals Mom and Babyare fighting for their home and their very lives. Orangutans are so under threat that they are listed as critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

“Presently, orangutans are threatened because their forest home is being destroyed by logging, forest conversion to oil palm plantations and other crops, forest fires, the international pet trade and bushmeat. ”

(Source: Greenpeace.com)

Why are Orangutans Threatened?

Orangutans are now only found in Indonesia, with a dwindling population that Greenpeace estimate to be between 15,000 and 25,000. In 2007, a UN Environment Program report suggested that 98% of Indonesia’s natural rainforest may be destroyed by 2022. As these forests fall so do the orangutan populations.Orangutan Reaching Out

Orangutans are amazing creatures. They spend much of their life in the canopy of the forest; roaming great distances, sleeping in nests, feeding on fruit, insects and bark and moving with ease through dense habitats. They rarely come down to the forest floor. These majestic beings play a critical role in the forest, dispersing seed that allows a forest to rejuvenate itself and maintain its diversity.

The Human Ape 1of10

See the 2-10 YouTube Videos here

 

Orangutan Baby

 

 

The destruction of orangutan habitat is their greatest threat. This destruction is through fragmentation and degradation by logging, agricultural conversion such as for palm oil, infrastructure development, settlement expansion, forest fires, mining and invasive species.  Additionally, the threat of extinction from hunting looms ever pervasive over the heads of the orangutan.

 

UN Environment Program report suggested that 98% of Indonesia’s natural rainforest may be destroyed by 2022

(Source: Greenpeace.com)

 

Males and Females survival - BBC

 

Oranutan Mom and Baby

 

 

Orangutan: Man of the Forest - Adopt with World Wildlife Fund

As an endangered species orangutans are protected, but their habitat is not. According to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), saving orangutans is about conserving forest habitat and reducing the main threats to those forests. We can all do things to help protect the orangutan, including:

 

green checkAdopt an orangutan through a program such as the one run by the World Wildlife Fund.

green checkSupport the efforts to decrease consumption of tropical hardwoods and palm oil.

green checkPurchase products created from certified and sustainable forests.

green checkPlant trees in your garden, volunteer with a local tree-planting group or support a national program for reforestation, such as that run by the American Forests.


Keep the Earth Beautiful!

Orangutan Play

 

Green Tip:

  • Reduce the amount of plastic garbage you produce.
    • Stop drinking bottled water; filter your own.
    • Don’t release balloons or allow plastic bags to fly away - animals try to eat these items.
    • Recycle plastics and other items.
    • Use reusable grocery bags!
  • sea turtle 3 Tote BagSea Turtle BagCrab Bag

     

Hydroponics Gardening Click Here!

Organic Gardening Click Here!

Do it yourself Japanese Gardening Click Here!

 

The Frog

Please learn more about global warming, and the decline of the forests. Teach your children and others about the importance of reducing waste, pollution and greenhouse gases.

 

Thank you for taking the time to read about Orangutans.


Lucy Brake: Writer & Editor

Sharon Haddox: Writer, Editor & Designer
SeaGreenNews.com
Wildlife Enthusiasts & Green Advocates

Because Green Matters!



Books on Orangutans
DVD's on Orangutans
Tribal Colorful Sea Turtle Tote Bag

Tribal Colorful Sea Turtle Tote Bag

Polynesian style tribal artwork, maori sea turtle with geometric shapes. Black and red to strike a pose with this giant of the sea. Show your love for the ocean and marine life with this great design


Tribal Colorful Sea Turtle Wall Clock

Tribal Colorful Sea Turtle Wall Clock

Polynesian style tribal artwork, maori sea turtle with geometric shapes. Black and red to strike a pose with this giant of the sea. Show your love for the ocean and marine life with this great design


Tribal Colorful Sea Turtle Framed Panel Print

Tribal Colorful Sea Turtle Framed Panel Print

Polynesian style tribal artwork, maori sea turtle with geometric shapes. Black and red to strike a pose with this giant of the sea. Show your love for the ocean and marine life with this great design


 

Sources:
Photo Credits:
Labeled photographs courtesy of photographer Sharon H.
PhotoBucket.com
Special Note:

15% of all profits from SeaGreenNews.com go to non-profit organizations to help fund environmental awareness or education programs, environmental enhancement programs, saving endangered or threatened species programs and like organizations. Examples being: Sound Experience, Defenders of Wildlife, Harbor WildWatch, EarthWatch Institute, Sustainability Institute, People for Puget Sound, Pollinator Partnership and others.

 

 

 

Last Updated on Monday, 22 August 2011 00:04
 

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