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Bornean orangutan

The Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) is a species of orangutan endemic to the island of Borneo. Together with the Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelii) and Tapanuli orangutan (Pongo tapanuliensis), it belongs to the only genus of great apes native to Asia. Like the other great apes, orangutans are highly intelligent, displaying tool use and distinct cultural patterns in the wild. Orangutans share approximately 97% of their DNA with humans.[2] Also called mias by the local population,[3] the Bornean orangutan is a critically endangered species, with deforestation, palm oil plantations, and hunting posing a serious threat to its continued existence.

Bornean orangutan
Male
Female with infant
both at Tanjung Puting National Park, Borneo
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Haplorhini
Infraorder: Simiiformes
Family: Hominidae
Genus: Pongo
Species:
P. pygmaeus
Binomial name
Pongo pygmaeus
(Linnaeus, 1760)
Subspecies
  • P. p. morio
  • P. p. pygmaeus
  • P. p. wurmbii
Distribution of Pongo pygmaeus in Borneo
Synonyms

P. agris (Schreber, 1799)
P. batangtuensis (Selenka, 1896)
P. borneensis Röhrer-Ertl, 1983
P. borneo (Lacépède, 1799)
P. brookei (Blyth, 1853)
P. curtus (Blyth, 1855)
P. dadappensis (Selenka, 1896)
P. genepaiensis (Selenka, 1896)
P. landakkensis (Selenka, 1896)
P. morio (Owen, 1837)
P. owenii (Blyth, 1853)
P. rantaiensis (Selenka, 1896)
P. rufus (Lesson, 1840)
P. satyrus (Linnaeus, 1766) [in part]
P. skalauensis (Selenka, 1896)>
P. sumatranus (Mayer, 1856)
P. tuakensis (Selenka, 1896)
P. wallichii (Gray, 1871)
P. wurmbii (Tiedemann, 1808)

Taxonomy

 
Male Bornean orangutan in Taman Safari park

The Bornean orangutan and the Sumatran orangutan diverged about 400,000 years ago,[4] with a continued low level of gene flow between them since then.[4] The two orangutan species were considered merely subspecies until 1996; they were elevated to species following sequencing of their mitochondrial DNA.

The Bornean orangutan has three subspecies:[1]

There is some uncertainty about this, however. The population currently listed as P. p. wurmbii may be closer to the Sumatran orangutan (P. abelii) than to the Bornean orangutan. If this is confirmed, P. abelii would be a subspecies of P. wurmbii (Tiedeman, 1808).[5] In addition, the type locality of P. pygmaeus has not been established beyond doubt; it may be from the population currently listed as P. wurmbii (in which case P. wurmbii would be a junior synonym of P. pygmaeus, while one of the names currently considered a junior synonym of P. pygmaeus would take precedence for the taxon in Sarawak and northern West Kalimantan).[5] Bradon-Jones et al. considered P. morio to be a synonym of P. pygmaeus, and the population found in East Kalimantan and Sabah to be a potentially unnamed separate taxon.[5]

In early October 2014, researchers from domestic and foreign countries found about 50 orangutans in several groups in South Kalimantan Province, although previously there is no record that the province has orangutans.[6]

As a member of the family Hominidae, Bornean orangutans are one of the closest extant relatives to Homo sapiens.

 
Juvenile male at Tanjung Puting National Park

This species was originally discovered by native Malaysians. There are several mentions of orangutans in Malaysian folklore. However, this species was originally named and described by the notable zoologist Carl Linnaeus in 1799. Its original name was Simia satyrus, meaning "satyr monkey", but was changed when scientists discovered that not all orangutans are one species. The holotype of this organism is located in the British Museum in London.[7]

The current species name P. pygmaeus is not Latin unlike most other Linnean classifications. The genus name Pongo is derived from the Bantu word mpongo used to indicate a large primate. It was originally used to describe chimpanzees in Western African dialects.[8] The species name pygmaeus is derived from the Greek word "pygmy" meaning dwarf.[9]

Physical description

 
The skull
 
The skeleton

The Bornean orangutan is the third-largest ape after the western gorilla, and the largest truly arboreal (or tree-dwelling) extant ape.[10][11] Body weights broadly overlap with the considerably taller Homo sapiens, but the latter is considerably more variable in size.[12] By comparison, the Sumatran orangutan is similar in size but, on average, is marginally lighter in weight.[13][14] A survey of wild orangutans found that males weigh on average 75 kg (165 lb), ranging from 50–100 kg (110–220 lb), and 1.2–1.7 m (3.9–5.6 ft) long; females average 38.5 kg (85 lb), ranging from 30–50 kg (66–110 lb), and 1–1.2 m (3.3–3.9 ft) long.[15][16] While in captivity, orangutans can grow considerably overweight, up to more than 165 kg (364 lb).[17] The heaviest known male orangutan in captivity was an obese male named "Andy", who weighed 204 kg (450 lb) in 1959 when he was 13 years old.[18]

The Bornean orangutan has a distinctive body shape with very long arms that may reach up to 1.5 metres in length. It has grey skin, a coarse, shaggy, reddish coat[19] and prehensile, grasping hands and feet.[20] Its coat does not cover its face unlike most mammals, although Bornean orangutans do have some hair on their faces including a beard and mustache. It also has large, fatty cheek pads known as flanges as well as a pendulous throat sac.[21]

 
A male orangutan at Moscow Zoo. The male's face pad widens as he grows older.

Bornean orangutans are highly sexually dimorphic and have several features that differ between males and females. Males have much larger cheek pads, or flanges, that are composed of muscle and large amounts of fat. In females, the flanges are mostly composed of muscle. Males have relatively larger canines and premolars. Males have a more pronounced beard and mustache. The throat sac in males is also considerably larger. There are two body types for sexually mature males: smaller or larger. Larger males are more dominant but smaller males still breed successfully. There is little sexual dimorphism at birth.[21]

Habitat and distribution

The Bornean orangutan lives in tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forest in the Bornean lowlands, as well as mountainous areas up to 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) above sea level.[22] This species lives throughout the canopy of primary and secondary forest, and moves large distances to find trees bearing fruit.[22]

It is found in the two Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak, and four of the five Indonesian Provinces of Kalimantan.[1] Due to habitat destruction, the species distribution is now highly patchy throughout the island, the species has become rare in the southeast of the island, as well as in the forest between the Rajang River in central Sarawak and the Padas River in western Sabah. Its presence in Brunei is uncertain and unconfirmed.[1]

The first complete orangutan skeleton that was discovered was in the Hoa Binh province in Vietnam and thought to be from the late Pleistocene epoch. It differed from modern orangutans only in that its body was proportionately smaller compared to its head. This fossil and others confirm that orangutans once inhabited continental Southeast Asia even though currently, Bornean orangutans are only found in Malaysia and Indonesia.[23]

Behavior and ecology

 
Bornean orangutan in its nest

In history, orangutans ranged throughout Southeast Asia and into southern China, as well as on the island of Java and in southern Sumatra. They primarily inhabit peat swamp forest, tropical heath forest, and mixed dipterocarp forest.[2] Bornean orangutan are more solitary than their Sumatran relatives. Two or three orangutans with overlapping territories may interact, but only for short periods of time.[24] Although orangutans are not territorial, adult males will display threatening behaviors upon meeting other males, and only socialize with females to mate.[25] Males are considered the most solitary of the orangutans. The Bornean orangutan has a lifespan of 35–45 years in the wild;[4] in captivity it can live to be about 60.[26]

Despite being arboreal, the Bornean orangutan travels on the ground more than its Sumatran counterpart. This may be in part because no large terrestrial predators could threaten an orangutan in Borneo. In Sumatra, orangutans must face predation by the fierce Sumatran tiger.[27]

The Bornean orangutan exhibits nest-building behavior. Nests are built for use at night or during the day. Young orangutans learn by observing their mother's nest-building behaviour. This skill is practiced by juvenile orangutans. Nests may be elaborate and involve a foundation and mattress made by intertwining leaves and branches and adding broken leafy branches. Additional features such as shade, waterproof roof, "pillow", and "blanket", all of which are made from branches, twigs and leaves, may also be added.[28] Nest-building in primates is considered as an example of tool use and not animal architecture.[29]

Diet

The Bornean orangutan diet is composed of over 400 types of food, including wild figs, durians (Durio zibethinus and D. graveolens),[30] leaves, seeds, bird eggs, flowers, sap, vines,[31] honey, fungi, spider webs,[31] insects, and, to a lesser extent than the Sumatran orangutan, bark.[2][16] They have also been known to consume the inner shoots of plants and vines.[2] They will also occasionally eat nutrient rich soil.[31] They get the necessary quantities of water from both fruit and from tree holes.[22]

 
An orangutan peeling a banana with its hand and foot.

Bornean orangutans have been sighted using spears to attempt (unsuccessfully) to catch fish.[32] The species has been observed using tools such as leaves to wipe off faeces, a pad of leaves for holding spiny durian fruit, a leafy branch for a bee swatter, a bunch of leafy branches held together as an "umbrella" while traveling in the rain, a single stick as backscratcher, and a branch or tree trunk as a missile.[33] In some regions, orangutans occasionally eat soil to get minerals that may neutralize the toxins and acids they consume in their primarily vegetarian diets.[2] On rare occasions, orangutans will prey upon other, smaller primates, such as slow lorises.[2]

Reproduction

 
A rehabilitated female with her young baby in Sepilok Orang Utan Rehabilitation Centre, Sabah, Malaysia

Males and females generally come together only to mate. Subadult males (unflanged) will try to mate with any female and will be successful around half the time.[24] Dominant flanged males will call and advertise their position to receptive females, who prefer mating with flanged males.[24] Adult males will often target females with weaned infants as mating partners because the female is likely to be fertile.[34]

Females reach sexual maturity and experience their first ovulatory cycle between about six and 11 years of age, although females with more body fat may experience this at an earlier age.[24] The estrous cycle lasts between 22 and 30 days and menopause has been reported in captive orangutans at about age 48.[24] Females tend to give birth at about 14–15 years of age. Newborn orangutans nurse every three to four hours, and begin to take soft food from their mothers' lips by four months. During the first year of its life, the young clings to its mother's abdomen by entwining its fingers in and gripping her hair. Offspring are weaned at about four years, but this could be much longer, and soon after they start their adolescent stage of exploring, but always within sight of their mother.[24] During this period, they will also actively seek other young orangutans to play with and travel with. On average, juveniles do not become completely independent until they are about seven years of age. The birth rate for orangutans has been decreasing largely due to a lack of sufficient nutrients as a result of habitat loss.

A 2011 study on female orangutans in free-ranging rehabilitation programs found that individuals that were supplemented with food resources had shorter interbirth intervals, as well as a reduced age, at first birth.[35]

Conservation status

The Bornean orangutan is more common than the Sumatran, with about 104,700 individuals in the wild, whereas just under 14,000 Sumatran orangutans are left in the wild.[1][36] Orangutans are becoming increasingly endangered due to habitat destruction and the bushmeat trade, and young orangutans are captured to be sold as pets, usually entailing the killing of their mothers.[37]

The Bornean orangutan is critically endangered[1][38] according to the IUCN Red List of mammals, and is listed on Appendix I of CITES. The total number of Bornean orangutans is estimated to be less than 14% of what it was in the recent past (from around 10,000 years ago until the middle of the 20th century), and this sharp decline has occurred mostly over the past few decades due to human activities and development.[1] Species distribution is now highly patchy throughout Borneo; it is apparently absent or uncommon in the southeast of the island, as well as in the forest between the Rajang River in central Sarawak and the Padas River in western Sabah (including the Sultanate of Brunei).[1] A population of around 6,900 is found in Sabangau National Park, but this environment is at risk.[39]

This view is also supported by the United Nations Environment Programme, which stated in its 2007 report that, due to illegal logging, fire and the extensive development of palm oil plantations, orangutans are critically endangered, and if the current trend continues, they will become extinct.[40] When forest is burned down to clear room for palm oil plantations, not only does the Bornean orangutan suffer from habitat loss, but several individuals have been burned and killed in fires. Palm oil accounts for over one tenth of Indonesia's export earnings. It is in high demand because it is used in several packaged foods, deodorants, shampoos, soaps, candies, and baked goods.[41]

Climate change is another threat to Bornean orangutan conservation. The effects that human activity have had on Indonesian rainfall have made food less abundant and so Bornean orangutans are less likely to receive full nutrients so that they can be sufficiently healthy to breed.

A November 2011 survey, based on interviews with 6,983 respondents in 687 villages across Kalimantan in 2008 to 2009, gave estimated orangutan killing rates of between 750 and 1800 in the year leading up to April 2008.[42] These killing rates were higher than previously thought and confirm that the continued existence of the orangutan in Kalimantan is under serious threat. The survey did not quantify the additional threat to the species due to habitat loss from deforestation and expanding palm-oil plantations. The survey found that 73% of respondents knew orangutans were protected by Indonesian law.[42]

 
A young captive orangutan sleeping.

However, the Indonesian government rarely prosecutes or punishes perpetrators.[43] In a rare prosecution in November 2011, two men were arrested for killing at least 20 orangutans and a number of long-nosed proboscis monkeys. They were ordered to conduct the killings by the supervisor of a palm oil plantation, to protect the crop, with a payment of $100 for a dead orangutan and $22 for a monkey.[44]

Rescue and rehabilitation centers

Bornean orangutan in the Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens.

A number of orangutan rescue and rehabilitation projects operate in Borneo.

The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS) founded by Dr Willie Smits has rescue and rehabilitation centres at Wanariset and Samboja Lestari in East Kalimantan and Nyaru Menteng, in Central Kalimantan founded and managed by Lone Drøscher Nielsen. BOS also works to conserve and recreate the fast-disappearing rainforest habitat of the orangutan, at Samboja Lestari and Mawas.

Orangutan Foundation International, founded by Dr Birutė Galdikas, rescues and rehabilitates orangutans, preparing them for release back into protected areas of the Indonesian rain forest. In addition, it promotes the preservation of the rain forest for them.

The Sepilok Orangutan Rehabilitation Centre near Sandakan in the state of Sabah in Malaysian Borneo opened in 1964 as the first official orangutan rehabilitation project.[45]

Orangutan Foundation, founded by Ashley Leiman, operates programmes in Central Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo. The Foundation rescues orphaned orangutans and enters them into their soft-release programme, allowing them to develop the skills necessary to survive in the wild. When old enough, orangutans are released into the protected Lamandau Wildlife Reserve. Orangutan Foundation works to protect orangutans by focusing on habitat protection and capacity building, especially in local communities.[46]

A seven-year longitudinal study published in 2011 looked at whether the lifespan of zoo-housed orangutans was related to a subjective assessment of well-being, with the intent of applying such measures to assess the welfare of orangutans in captivity. Of the subjects, 100 were Sumatran (Pongo abelii), 54 Bornean (Pongo pygmaeus) and 30 were hybrid orangutans. 113 zoo employees, who were highly familiar with the typical behavior of the orangutans, used a four-item questionnaire to assess their subjective well-being. The results indicated that orangutans in higher subjective well-being were less likely to die during the follow-up period. The study concluded that happiness was related to longer life in orangutans.[47]

In late 2014, Nyaru Menteng veterinarians failed to rescue the life of a female orangutan. An operation was performed in which 40 air-rifle pellets were removed from her body. The orangutan was found at a palm oil plantation in Indonesian Borneo.[48]

Genome and Demographic History

Genomic information
NCBI genome ID10714

Orangutans and humans diverged lineages approximately 14-18 million years ago. About 17,000 years ago, there was a migration of the Bornean orangutans as they eventually went to Sumatra, effectively trading places with the Sumatra orangutans that were there at the time. These two species of orangutans have been closely related throughout their evolutionary history due to the fact that they were so close in physical proximity. Therefore, their genomes and demographic history are similar. The two species themselves are estimated to have split about 3.5 million years ago.[49] Although these two species have officially diverged, it is speculated that the reason as to why they are genetically similar is because the males of each respective species tend to migrate between the two islands and breed with the females from their sister species. As a result, both the Bornean orangutans and the Sumatran orangutans have been studied closely as a pair, and thus much genome findings attribute evolutionary changes to this relationship. In addition, the Bornean orangutans, as compared to the Sumatran orangutans, have lower autosomal gene diversity. This is attributed to the fact that they have a much smaller population size. Also, the Bornean orangutans have lower nucleotide diversity.[50]

As the Bornean orangutans and Sumatra orangutans both exist within the same species, they exhibit similar cultural behaviors that have been found to exist amongst most orangutan populations. The fact that orangutans tend to showcase similar cultural traditions is due to the fact that they typically live in similar environments and are adept at learning from one another from their early stages of life.[51]

The Bornean orangutan has been linked to the fact that it has gone through a deep divergence in relation to its relatives and ancestors.[52] During the Middle Pleistocene, there were low levels of gene flow, which was determined through the analysis of Y-chromosomal data. One reason as to why this may have occurred is because of the Sunda shelf, which is where the island of Borneo is located.[49] During this time, this event's dry climate during the Late Pleistocene attributed to a more abundant genetic exchange. As a result, there were many early divergences of gene pools between the Bornean orangutans, as well as the Sumatran orangutans. Relating back to the Middle Pleistocene, the Bornean orangutan lineage went through a dramatic population decline. This is likely attributed to the fact that they had been isolated from their ancestral populations.[50] Therefore, natural geographic barriers are attributed to be the reason as to why the Bornean orangutans were eventually isolated and ended up colonizing other regions. In addition, this geographic isolation also indicates that the Bornean orangutans did not undergo a severe genetic bottleneck.[52] With the Borneo orangutan, selection was found to have been found through physiological adaptations – most of which has to do with being able to adapt to the ever-changing climate on the Borneo island.[49]

See also

References

This article incorporates text from the ARKive fact-file "Bornean orangutan" under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License and the GFDL.

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Further reading

Russon, Anne E.; Compost, Alain; Kuncoro, Purwo; Ferisa, Agnes (December 2014). "Orangutan fish eating, primate aquatic fauna eating, and their implications for the origins of ancestral hominin fish eating". Journal of Human Evolution. 77: 50–63. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2014.06.007. PMID 25038033.

External links

  • media from ARKive  
  • The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS)
  • World Wildlife Fund: Orangutans
  • Orangutan Foundation International
  • Sepilok Orang Utan Sanctuary

bornean, orangutan, pongo, pygmaeus, species, orangutan, endemic, island, borneo, together, with, sumatran, orangutan, pongo, abelii, tapanuli, orangutan, pongo, tapanuliensis, belongs, only, genus, great, apes, native, asia, like, other, great, apes, oranguta. The Bornean orangutan Pongo pygmaeus is a species of orangutan endemic to the island of Borneo Together with the Sumatran orangutan Pongo abelii and Tapanuli orangutan Pongo tapanuliensis it belongs to the only genus of great apes native to Asia Like the other great apes orangutans are highly intelligent displaying tool use and distinct cultural patterns in the wild Orangutans share approximately 97 of their DNA with humans 2 Also called mias by the local population 3 the Bornean orangutan is a critically endangered species with deforestation palm oil plantations and hunting posing a serious threat to its continued existence Bornean orangutanMaleFemale with infantboth at Tanjung Puting National Park BorneoConservation statusCritically Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix I CITES 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder PrimatesSuborder HaplorhiniInfraorder SimiiformesFamily HominidaeGenus PongoSpecies P pygmaeusBinomial namePongo pygmaeus Linnaeus 1760 SubspeciesP p morio P p pygmaeus P p wurmbiiDistribution of Pongo pygmaeus in BorneoSynonymsP agris Schreber 1799 P batangtuensis Selenka 1896 P borneensis Rohrer Ertl 1983 P borneo Lacepede 1799 P brookei Blyth 1853 P curtus Blyth 1855 P dadappensis Selenka 1896 P genepaiensis Selenka 1896 P landakkensis Selenka 1896 P morio Owen 1837 P owenii Blyth 1853 P rantaiensis Selenka 1896 P rufus Lesson 1840 P satyrus Linnaeus 1766 in part P skalauensis Selenka 1896 gt P sumatranus Mayer 1856 P tuakensis Selenka 1896 P wallichii Gray 1871 P wurmbii Tiedemann 1808 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Physical description 3 Habitat and distribution 4 Behavior and ecology 4 1 Diet 4 2 Reproduction 5 Conservation status 5 1 Rescue and rehabilitation centers 6 Genome and Demographic History 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTaxonomy Male Bornean orangutan in Taman Safari park The Bornean orangutan and the Sumatran orangutan diverged about 400 000 years ago 4 with a continued low level of gene flow between them since then 4 The two orangutan species were considered merely subspecies until 1996 they were elevated to species following sequencing of their mitochondrial DNA The Bornean orangutan has three subspecies 1 Northwest Bornean orangutan Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus Sarawak Malaysia and northern West Kalimantan Indonesia Central Bornean orangutan P p wurmbii Southern West Kalimantan and Central Kalimantan Indonesia Northeast Bornean orangutan P p morio East Kalimantan Indonesia and Sabah Malaysia There is some uncertainty about this however The population currently listed as P p wurmbii may be closer to the Sumatran orangutan P abelii than to the Bornean orangutan If this is confirmed P abelii would be a subspecies of P wurmbii Tiedeman 1808 5 In addition the type locality of P pygmaeus has not been established beyond doubt it may be from the population currently listed as P wurmbii in which case P wurmbii would be a junior synonym of P pygmaeus while one of the names currently considered a junior synonym of P pygmaeus would take precedence for the taxon in Sarawak and northern West Kalimantan 5 Bradon Jones et al considered P morio to be a synonym of P pygmaeus and the population found in East Kalimantan and Sabah to be a potentially unnamed separate taxon 5 In early October 2014 researchers from domestic and foreign countries found about 50 orangutans in several groups in South Kalimantan Province although previously there is no record that the province has orangutans 6 As a member of the family Hominidae Bornean orangutans are one of the closest extant relatives to Homo sapiens Juvenile male at Tanjung Puting National Park This species was originally discovered by native Malaysians There are several mentions of orangutans in Malaysian folklore However this species was originally named and described by the notable zoologist Carl Linnaeus in 1799 Its original name was Simia satyrus meaning satyr monkey but was changed when scientists discovered that not all orangutans are one species The holotype of this organism is located in the British Museum in London 7 The current species name P pygmaeus is not Latin unlike most other Linnean classifications The genus name Pongo is derived from the Bantu word mpongo used to indicate a large primate It was originally used to describe chimpanzees in Western African dialects 8 The species name pygmaeus is derived from the Greek word pygmy meaning dwarf 9 Physical description The skull The skeleton The Bornean orangutan is the third largest ape after the western gorilla and the largest truly arboreal or tree dwelling extant ape 10 11 Body weights broadly overlap with the considerably taller Homo sapiens but the latter is considerably more variable in size 12 By comparison the Sumatran orangutan is similar in size but on average is marginally lighter in weight 13 14 A survey of wild orangutans found that males weigh on average 75 kg 165 lb ranging from 50 100 kg 110 220 lb and 1 2 1 7 m 3 9 5 6 ft long females average 38 5 kg 85 lb ranging from 30 50 kg 66 110 lb and 1 1 2 m 3 3 3 9 ft long 15 16 While in captivity orangutans can grow considerably overweight up to more than 165 kg 364 lb 17 The heaviest known male orangutan in captivity was an obese male named Andy who weighed 204 kg 450 lb in 1959 when he was 13 years old 18 The Bornean orangutan has a distinctive body shape with very long arms that may reach up to 1 5 metres in length It has grey skin a coarse shaggy reddish coat 19 and prehensile grasping hands and feet 20 Its coat does not cover its face unlike most mammals although Bornean orangutans do have some hair on their faces including a beard and mustache It also has large fatty cheek pads known as flanges as well as a pendulous throat sac 21 A male orangutan at Moscow Zoo The male s face pad widens as he grows older Bornean orangutans are highly sexually dimorphic and have several features that differ between males and females Males have much larger cheek pads or flanges that are composed of muscle and large amounts of fat In females the flanges are mostly composed of muscle Males have relatively larger canines and premolars Males have a more pronounced beard and mustache The throat sac in males is also considerably larger There are two body types for sexually mature males smaller or larger Larger males are more dominant but smaller males still breed successfully There is little sexual dimorphism at birth 21 Habitat and distributionThe Bornean orangutan lives in tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forest in the Bornean lowlands as well as mountainous areas up to 1 500 metres 4 900 ft above sea level 22 This species lives throughout the canopy of primary and secondary forest and moves large distances to find trees bearing fruit 22 It is found in the two Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak and four of the five Indonesian Provinces of Kalimantan 1 Due to habitat destruction the species distribution is now highly patchy throughout the island the species has become rare in the southeast of the island as well as in the forest between the Rajang River in central Sarawak and the Padas River in western Sabah Its presence in Brunei is uncertain and unconfirmed 1 The first complete orangutan skeleton that was discovered was in the Hoa Binh province in Vietnam and thought to be from the late Pleistocene epoch It differed from modern orangutans only in that its body was proportionately smaller compared to its head This fossil and others confirm that orangutans once inhabited continental Southeast Asia even though currently Bornean orangutans are only found in Malaysia and Indonesia 23 Behavior and ecology Bornean orangutan in its nest In history orangutans ranged throughout Southeast Asia and into southern China as well as on the island of Java and in southern Sumatra They primarily inhabit peat swamp forest tropical heath forest and mixed dipterocarp forest 2 Bornean orangutan are more solitary than their Sumatran relatives Two or three orangutans with overlapping territories may interact but only for short periods of time 24 Although orangutans are not territorial adult males will display threatening behaviors upon meeting other males and only socialize with females to mate 25 Males are considered the most solitary of the orangutans The Bornean orangutan has a lifespan of 35 45 years in the wild 4 in captivity it can live to be about 60 26 Despite being arboreal the Bornean orangutan travels on the ground more than its Sumatran counterpart This may be in part because no large terrestrial predators could threaten an orangutan in Borneo In Sumatra orangutans must face predation by the fierce Sumatran tiger 27 The Bornean orangutan exhibits nest building behavior Nests are built for use at night or during the day Young orangutans learn by observing their mother s nest building behaviour This skill is practiced by juvenile orangutans Nests may be elaborate and involve a foundation and mattress made by intertwining leaves and branches and adding broken leafy branches Additional features such as shade waterproof roof pillow and blanket all of which are made from branches twigs and leaves may also be added 28 Nest building in primates is considered as an example of tool use and not animal architecture 29 Diet The Bornean orangutan diet is composed of over 400 types of food including wild figs durians Durio zibethinus and D graveolens 30 leaves seeds bird eggs flowers sap vines 31 honey fungi spider webs 31 insects and to a lesser extent than the Sumatran orangutan bark 2 16 They have also been known to consume the inner shoots of plants and vines 2 They will also occasionally eat nutrient rich soil 31 They get the necessary quantities of water from both fruit and from tree holes 22 An orangutan peeling a banana with its hand and foot Bornean orangutans have been sighted using spears to attempt unsuccessfully to catch fish 32 The species has been observed using tools such as leaves to wipe off faeces a pad of leaves for holding spiny durian fruit a leafy branch for a bee swatter a bunch of leafy branches held together as an umbrella while traveling in the rain a single stick as backscratcher and a branch or tree trunk as a missile 33 In some regions orangutans occasionally eat soil to get minerals that may neutralize the toxins and acids they consume in their primarily vegetarian diets 2 On rare occasions orangutans will prey upon other smaller primates such as slow lorises 2 Reproduction A rehabilitated female with her young baby in Sepilok Orang Utan Rehabilitation Centre Sabah Malaysia Males and females generally come together only to mate Subadult males unflanged will try to mate with any female and will be successful around half the time 24 Dominant flanged males will call and advertise their position to receptive females who prefer mating with flanged males 24 Adult males will often target females with weaned infants as mating partners because the female is likely to be fertile 34 Females reach sexual maturity and experience their first ovulatory cycle between about six and 11 years of age although females with more body fat may experience this at an earlier age 24 The estrous cycle lasts between 22 and 30 days and menopause has been reported in captive orangutans at about age 48 24 Females tend to give birth at about 14 15 years of age Newborn orangutans nurse every three to four hours and begin to take soft food from their mothers lips by four months During the first year of its life the young clings to its mother s abdomen by entwining its fingers in and gripping her hair Offspring are weaned at about four years but this could be much longer and soon after they start their adolescent stage of exploring but always within sight of their mother 24 During this period they will also actively seek other young orangutans to play with and travel with On average juveniles do not become completely independent until they are about seven years of age The birth rate for orangutans has been decreasing largely due to a lack of sufficient nutrients as a result of habitat loss A 2011 study on female orangutans in free ranging rehabilitation programs found that individuals that were supplemented with food resources had shorter interbirth intervals as well as a reduced age at first birth 35 Conservation statusThe Bornean orangutan is more common than the Sumatran with about 104 700 individuals in the wild whereas just under 14 000 Sumatran orangutans are left in the wild 1 36 Orangutans are becoming increasingly endangered due to habitat destruction and the bushmeat trade and young orangutans are captured to be sold as pets usually entailing the killing of their mothers 37 The Bornean orangutan is critically endangered 1 38 according to the IUCN Red List of mammals and is listed on Appendix I of CITES The total number of Bornean orangutans is estimated to be less than 14 of what it was in the recent past from around 10 000 years ago until the middle of the 20th century and this sharp decline has occurred mostly over the past few decades due to human activities and development 1 Species distribution is now highly patchy throughout Borneo it is apparently absent or uncommon in the southeast of the island as well as in the forest between the Rajang River in central Sarawak and the Padas River in western Sabah including the Sultanate of Brunei 1 A population of around 6 900 is found in Sabangau National Park but this environment is at risk 39 This view is also supported by the United Nations Environment Programme which stated in its 2007 report that due to illegal logging fire and the extensive development of palm oil plantations orangutans are critically endangered and if the current trend continues they will become extinct 40 When forest is burned down to clear room for palm oil plantations not only does the Bornean orangutan suffer from habitat loss but several individuals have been burned and killed in fires Palm oil accounts for over one tenth of Indonesia s export earnings It is in high demand because it is used in several packaged foods deodorants shampoos soaps candies and baked goods 41 Climate change is another threat to Bornean orangutan conservation The effects that human activity have had on Indonesian rainfall have made food less abundant and so Bornean orangutans are less likely to receive full nutrients so that they can be sufficiently healthy to breed A November 2011 survey based on interviews with 6 983 respondents in 687 villages across Kalimantan in 2008 to 2009 gave estimated orangutan killing rates of between 750 and 1800 in the year leading up to April 2008 42 These killing rates were higher than previously thought and confirm that the continued existence of the orangutan in Kalimantan is under serious threat The survey did not quantify the additional threat to the species due to habitat loss from deforestation and expanding palm oil plantations The survey found that 73 of respondents knew orangutans were protected by Indonesian law 42 A young captive orangutan sleeping However the Indonesian government rarely prosecutes or punishes perpetrators 43 In a rare prosecution in November 2011 two men were arrested for killing at least 20 orangutans and a number of long nosed proboscis monkeys They were ordered to conduct the killings by the supervisor of a palm oil plantation to protect the crop with a payment of 100 for a dead orangutan and 22 for a monkey 44 Rescue and rehabilitation centers source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Bornean orangutan in the Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens A number of orangutan rescue and rehabilitation projects operate in Borneo The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOS founded by Dr Willie Smits has rescue and rehabilitation centres at Wanariset and Samboja Lestari in East Kalimantan and Nyaru Menteng in Central Kalimantan founded and managed by Lone Droscher Nielsen BOS also works to conserve and recreate the fast disappearing rainforest habitat of the orangutan at Samboja Lestari and Mawas Orangutan Foundation International founded by Dr Birute Galdikas rescues and rehabilitates orangutans preparing them for release back into protected areas of the Indonesian rain forest In addition it promotes the preservation of the rain forest for them The Sepilok Orangutan Rehabilitation Centre near Sandakan in the state of Sabah in Malaysian Borneo opened in 1964 as the first official orangutan rehabilitation project 45 Orangutan Foundation founded by Ashley Leiman operates programmes in Central Kalimantan Indonesian Borneo The Foundation rescues orphaned orangutans and enters them into their soft release programme allowing them to develop the skills necessary to survive in the wild When old enough orangutans are released into the protected Lamandau Wildlife Reserve Orangutan Foundation works to protect orangutans by focusing on habitat protection and capacity building especially in local communities 46 A seven year longitudinal study published in 2011 looked at whether the lifespan of zoo housed orangutans was related to a subjective assessment of well being with the intent of applying such measures to assess the welfare of orangutans in captivity Of the subjects 100 were Sumatran Pongo abelii 54 Bornean Pongo pygmaeus and 30 were hybrid orangutans 113 zoo employees who were highly familiar with the typical behavior of the orangutans used a four item questionnaire to assess their subjective well being The results indicated that orangutans in higher subjective well being were less likely to die during the follow up period The study concluded that happiness was related to longer life in orangutans 47 In late 2014 Nyaru Menteng veterinarians failed to rescue the life of a female orangutan An operation was performed in which 40 air rifle pellets were removed from her body The orangutan was found at a palm oil plantation in Indonesian Borneo 48 Genome and Demographic HistoryGenomic informationNCBI genome ID10714Orangutans and humans diverged lineages approximately 14 18 million years ago About 17 000 years ago there was a migration of the Bornean orangutans as they eventually went to Sumatra effectively trading places with the Sumatra orangutans that were there at the time These two species of orangutans have been closely related throughout their evolutionary history due to the fact that they were so close in physical proximity Therefore their genomes and demographic history are similar The two species themselves are estimated to have split about 3 5 million years ago 49 Although these two species have officially diverged it is speculated that the reason as to why they are genetically similar is because the males of each respective species tend to migrate between the two islands and breed with the females from their sister species As a result both the Bornean orangutans and the Sumatran orangutans have been studied closely as a pair and thus much genome findings attribute evolutionary changes to this relationship In addition the Bornean orangutans as compared to the Sumatran orangutans have lower autosomal gene diversity This is attributed to the fact that they have a much smaller population size Also the Bornean orangutans have lower nucleotide diversity 50 As the Bornean orangutans and Sumatra orangutans both exist within the same species they exhibit similar cultural behaviors that have been found to exist amongst most orangutan populations The fact that orangutans tend to showcase similar cultural traditions is due to the fact that they typically live in similar environments and are adept at learning from one another from their early stages of life 51 The Bornean orangutan has been linked to the fact that it has gone through a deep divergence in relation to its relatives and ancestors 52 During the Middle Pleistocene there were low levels of gene flow which was determined through the analysis of Y chromosomal data One reason as to why this may have occurred is because of the Sunda shelf which is where the island of Borneo is located 49 During this time this event s dry climate during the Late Pleistocene attributed to a more abundant genetic exchange As a result there were many early divergences of gene pools between the Bornean orangutans as well as the Sumatran orangutans Relating back to the Middle Pleistocene the Bornean orangutan lineage went through a dramatic population decline This is likely attributed to the fact that they had been isolated from their ancestral populations 50 Therefore natural geographic barriers are attributed to be the reason as to why the Bornean orangutans were eventually isolated and ended up colonizing other regions In addition this geographic isolation also indicates that the Bornean orangutans did not undergo a severe genetic bottleneck 52 With the Borneo orangutan selection was found to have been found through physiological adaptations most of which has to do with being able to adapt to the ever changing climate on the Borneo island 49 See alsoDeforestation in Borneo Social and environmental impact of palm oilReferencesThis article incorporates text from the ARKive fact file Bornean orangutan under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License and the GFDL a b c d e f g h i Ancrenaz M Gumal M Marshall A Meijaard E Wich S A amp Hussons S 2018 errata version of 2016 assessment Pongo pygmaeus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T17975A123809220 Retrieved 17 January 2022 a b c d e f Orangutan facts Orangutan Foundation International Retrieved 2012 03 17 Wallace Alfred Russel 2008 The Malay Archipelago Rev pbk ed Singapore Periplus Editions p 47 ISBN 978 0794605636 a b c Locke D P Hillier L W Warren W C Worley K C Nazareth L V Muzny D M Yang S P Wang Z Chinwalla A T Minx P amp Mitreva M 2011 Comparative and demographic analysis of orang utan genomes Nature 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11 November 2011 Turvey Samuel T ed Quantifying Killing of Orangutans and Human Orangutan Conflict in Kalimantan Indonesia PLOS ONE 6 11 e27491 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 627491M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0027491 PMC 3214049 PMID 22096582 Marshall Michael 15 November 2011 Humans killing at least 750 Bornean orang utans a year The New Scientist Retrieved 27 November 2011 quoting Ashley Leiman director of the Orangutan Foundation Mass Slaughter of Orang utans and Monkeys is Continuing in Kalimantan November 24 2011 Archived from the original on April 5 2012 Thompson S 2010 The Intimate Ape Orangutans and the Secret Life of a Vanishing Species Citadel Press p 54 ISBN 978 0 8065 3133 5 Orangutan Foundation Our work Orangutan Foundation Retrieved 16 September 2019 Weiss A Adams J M King E J 2011 Happy orang utans live longer lives Biology Letters 7 6 872 874 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2011 0543 PMC 3210686 PMID 21715398 Killed by 40 Pellets Archived from the original on December 16 2014 Retrieved December 10 2014 a b c Guethlein Lisbeth A Norman Paul J Heijmans Corinne M C Groot Natasja G de Hilton Hugo G Babrzadeh Farbod Abi Rached Laurent Bontrop Ronald E Parham Peter 2017 04 15 Two Orangutan Species Have Evolved Different KIR Alleles and Haplotypes The Journal of Immunology 198 8 3157 3169 doi 10 4049 jimmunol 1602163 ISSN 0022 1767 PMC 5438093 PMID 28264973 a b Mattle Greminger Maja P Bilgin Sonay Tugce Nater Alexander Pybus Marc Desai Tariq de Valles Guillem Casals Ferran Scally Aylwyn Bertranpetit Jaume Marques Bonet Tomas van Schaik Carel P 2018 11 15 Genomes reveal marked differences in the adaptive evolution between orangutan species Genome Biology 19 1 193 doi 10 1186 s13059 018 1562 6 ISSN 1474 760X PMC 6237011 PMID 30428903 Krutzen Michael Willems Erik P van Schaik Carel P November 2011 Culture and Geographic Variation in Orangutan Behavior Current Biology 21 21 1808 1812 doi 10 1016 j cub 2011 09 017 ISSN 0960 9822 PMID 22018539 S2CID 17540443 a b Goossens Benoit Chikhi Lounes Fairus Jalil Mohd James Sheena Ancrenaz Marc Lackman Ancrenaz Isabelle Bruford Michael W 2008 12 11 Taxonomy geographic variation and population genetics of Bornean and Sumatran orangutans Orangutans Oxford University Press pp 1 14 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199213276 003 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 921327 6 retrieved 2022 03 02Further readingRusson Anne E Compost Alain Kuncoro Purwo Ferisa Agnes December 2014 Orangutan fish eating primate aquatic fauna eating and their implications for the origins of ancestral hominin fish eating Journal of Human Evolution 77 50 63 doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2014 06 007 PMID 25038033 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pongo pygmaeus Bornean Orangutan Wikispecies has information related to Pongo pygmaeus Bornean orangutan media from ARKive The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOS Save The Orangutan Foundation World Wildlife Fund Orangutans Orangutan Foundation International Sepilok Orang Utan Sanctuary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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