Orangutans are found in Indonesia and Malaysia and there are two species: Sumatran and Bornean. They are the largest arboreal animals in the world and are well adapted for life in the trees. Orangutans do not live in large social groups, with adult males usually solitary and females accompanied by one or two offspring. They have a long period of dependency, with young staying with their mother until around 8 years old. The Bornean orangutan is classified as endangered.
Landscape restoration to support Bornean orangutan rehabilitation and reintro...CIFOR-ICRAF
The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS) rescues and rehabilitates over 2,000 orangutans on Borneo, with the goal of reintroducing them to natural habitat. However, finding suitable release sites is challenging due to habitat loss and human development. BOS has secured land through various means, including purchasing an Ecosystem Restoration Concession of 84,650 hectares. While this provides management control, it is expensive and ongoing costs are high. Overall, long-term orangutan conservation requires securing sufficient habitat and cooperation between all stakeholders in Indonesia.
The orangutan population is declining rapidly due to habitat loss and poaching. Habitat loss is primarily due to the conversion of forest land to palm oil plantations, while poaching includes illegal pet trades and hunting. Scientists predict orangutans could be extinct by 2022 if current threats are not adequately addressed. While some conservation efforts have helped rehabilitate orangutans, more widespread changes are needed to combat the steady population decline and protect this keystone species.
Orangutans are found in Indonesia and Malaysia and there are two species: Sumatran and Bornean. They are the largest arboreal animals in the world and are well adapted for life in the trees. Orangutans do not live in large social groups, with adult males usually solitary and females accompanied by one or two offspring. They have a long period of dependency, with young staying with their mother until around 8 years old. The Bornean orangutan is classified as endangered.
Landscape restoration to support Bornean orangutan rehabilitation and reintro...CIFOR-ICRAF
The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS) rescues and rehabilitates over 2,000 orangutans on Borneo, with the goal of reintroducing them to natural habitat. However, finding suitable release sites is challenging due to habitat loss and human development. BOS has secured land through various means, including purchasing an Ecosystem Restoration Concession of 84,650 hectares. While this provides management control, it is expensive and ongoing costs are high. Overall, long-term orangutan conservation requires securing sufficient habitat and cooperation between all stakeholders in Indonesia.
The orangutan population is declining rapidly due to habitat loss and poaching. Habitat loss is primarily due to the conversion of forest land to palm oil plantations, while poaching includes illegal pet trades and hunting. Scientists predict orangutans could be extinct by 2022 if current threats are not adequately addressed. While some conservation efforts have helped rehabilitate orangutans, more widespread changes are needed to combat the steady population decline and protect this keystone species.
There are two species of orangutan found in Southeast Asia: the Bornean orangutan lives in Borneo while the Sumatran orangutan lives in Sumatra. Orangutans spend nearly all their time in trees eating fruits, leaves, flowers and occasionally insects. They are well adapted to arboreal living with long arms for swinging between trees. Both orangutan species are endangered due to habitat loss from logging and palm oil plantations.
Orangutans are critically endangered native species found in Indonesia and Malaysia. Their forests are being destroyed by illegal logging, forest fires caused by land clearing for palm oil plantations. Timber and mining companies have illegally entered national parks, resulting in deforestation. Both Bornean and Sumatran orangutan species are endangered due to loss of habitat and being killed for bushmeat or protection of new agricultural lands. Over 1000 orangutans have been rescued and are in rehabilitation centers, but with continued habitat loss only a few may remain within two decades if no action is taken.
Orangutans are great apes that live in the tropical forests of Sumatra and Borneo in Southeast Asia. They grow to be 4 to 4.5 feet tall and weigh between 90 to 180 pounds depending on their gender. Orangutans eat a variety of foods including fruits, leaves, bark, termites, and ants. Females give birth once every 8 years and carry their babies for 9 months. Orangutans are threatened by habitat loss and poaching.
Orangutans live in the tropical forests of Sumatra and Borneo, but deforestation is threatening their habitat. Indonesia has the world's highest rate of deforestation, losing over 30,000 square kilometers of forest in 2006 alone due to illegal logging and the expansion of oil palm plantations for biofuels. This has made Indonesia the third largest contributor to global warming. Over 73% of logging in Indonesia is illegal, including in many national parks, leaving orangutans at risk of losing nearly all of their forest habitat within 15 years if urgent action is not taken.
The fate of orangutan conservation in Indonesia and strategies for improvementCIFOR-ICRAF
Despite laws put in place for their protection, orangutan populations in the wild continue to decline. From the populations existing in 1900, only 7% of the Bornean orangutan population and 14% of the Sumatran orangutan population have survived into the 20th century. In this presentation, CIFOR scientist Linda Yuliani discusses why orangutan conservation efforts seem to have had such little success, and provides some possible alternative approaches for more effective orangutan conservation. This presentation was given to delegates at the 2nd World Biodiversity Congress held recently in Malaysia.
Human-wildlife conflict in Asia: implications for orangutan conservationCIFOR-ICRAF
CIFOR scientist Linda Yuliani gives an overview of human-wildlife conflict in Asia, focusing on orangutan conservation to explore reasons for the continuing conflict and ways to avoid it in conservation. She gave this presentation at the ‘Linking Great Ape Conservation with Poverty Alleviation’ workshop hosted by CIFOR in January 2012.
El patinaje es una actividad recreativa y deportiva que consiste en deslizarse sobre superficies como asfalto o parqué usando patines. Se originó en Holanda en el siglo 18 y ha crecido para incluir disciplinas como hockey sobre patines y patinaje artístico. El patinaje proporciona beneficios para todo el cuerpo como tonificar los músculos y quemar calorías, además de mejorar la resistencia cardiovascular.
La capoeira es un arte marcial y baile afro-brasileño que data del siglo XVI y combina elementos de lucha, acrobacias, música y danza, ayudando a desarrollar fuerza, agilidad y disciplina mientras enseña valores como el trabajo en equipo y el respeto hacia los demás.
El documento describe la ballena azul, uno de los animales más grandes del mundo. Puede medir hasta 30 metros de longitud y pesar entre 170-180 toneladas. Se alimenta principalmente de krill y pequeños peces que ingiere filtrando grandes volúmenes de agua. Las ballenas azules viven en todos los océanos y su longevidad puede llegar a 80-90 años, aunque se encuentran en peligro de extinción debido a amenazas como las colisiones con barcos, quedar atrapadas en redes de pesca y los efect
There is an uncountable number of galaxies made up of stars. Our galaxy, the Milky Way, is 10,000 light years big and contains between 2 and 4 thousand million stars. The solar system orbits the sun and contains 8 planets, some of which have moons. The largest moons in our solar system include Ganymedes, Titan, Callisto, Io, Earth's moon, Europe, and Triton.
Our galaxy is called the Milky Way, which is approximately 10,000 light years in size. Galaxies are made up of stars, and there is an uncountably large number of galaxies in the universe.
Sir Edmund Hillary was a New Zealand mountaineer and explorer, best known for being one of the first two people to reach the summit of Mount Everest. In 1953, Hillary and Tenzing Norgay made the first official ascent of Everest via the South Col route. After his Everest success, Hillary devoted much of his later life to helping the Sherpa people of Nepal through the Himalayan Trust, which he founded.
Sir Edmund Hillary was a New Zealand mountaineer and explorer who, along with Tenzing Norgay, was one of the first two individuals known to have reached the summit of Mount Everest in 1953. After his successful Everest expedition, Hillary led several expeditions to Antarctica and helped establish scientific stations there. Later in life, he focused on helping the people of Nepal by building infrastructure like schools and hospitals.
Sir Edmund Hillary was a New Zealand mountaineer and explorer who, along with Tenzing Norgay, was one of the first two individuals known to reach the summit of Mount Everest in 1953. After his successful Everest expedition, Hillary led several expeditions to Antarctica and helped establish scientific stations there. He also devoted much of his later life to helping the people of Nepal by building infrastructure like schools and hospitals.
SpongeBob SquarePants lives in a pineapple under the sea. He is absorbent, yellow, and porous. The song encourages listeners to drop on the deck and flop like a fish if they want nautical nonsense, and it asks if they are ready to shout the name of the main character - SpongeBob SquarePants.
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