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Orangutans in danger as Indonesia floods destroy habitat

Orangutans in danger as Indonesia floods destroy habitat
Orangutans in danger as Indonesia floods destroy habitat

Amran Siagian (39), a resident of Sipirok in North Sumatra province, met Tapanuli Orangutans frequently on a hill.

Siagian who has been working at the Orangutan Center (OIC), as a ranger, to protect this endangered animal for at least five year, recalls that the orangutans loved eating durians and other fruits grown in the surrounding area.

Orangutans have disappeared from Sipirok after the landslides.

As of Tuesday, 962 people had died from the cyclone-induced flooding and landslides. 291 are still missing. Storms in southern Thailand and Malaysia also claimed the lives of?about 200 other people.

"They must have gone further and farther away." I could not hear their voices," Siagian said.

Local leaders and green groups have said that?deforestation caused by mining and logging has exacerbated the impact of floods and land slides. Large trees were cut down in Sipirok, which is a village located in South Tapanuli, and was one of the worst hit areas by the disaster. Siagian claimed that a company has been logging the area for more than a year. He said that the deforestation affected orangutans before the floods.

Orangutans live by moving from branch to branch between the forest canopy. Siagian stated that if the forest was sparse, they would have a difficult time. OIC founder Panud Hadisiswoyo stated that there were approximately 760 orangutans living in the Tapanuli Region.

He said that the biggest threat to forests is due to plantations, and extractive industries.

According to World Wildlife Fund, there are 119,000 orangutans in Indonesia and Malaysia.

Orangutans may become extinct in this area if the government does not step up. Siagian added that the deforestation was a major factor. (Reporting and writing by Ahmad Luqman Ismail in South Tapanuli, Ananda Teresia, Editing by Stephen Coates.

(source: Reuters)