A first for Sumatraโs orangutans as one crosses a canopy bridge
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JAKARTA, April 27 โ A Sumatran orangutan has been filmed for the first time crossing a man-made canopy bridge constructed to help the endangered animals bypass a tarred road on the Indonesian island, an NGO said yesterday.
Conservation group Tangguh Hutan Khatulistiwa, in partnership with the UK-based charity Sumatra Orangutan Society (SOS) and local authorities, built five canopy bridges in the North Sumatra province in 2024, after a road that serves as a lifeline for remote communities had been expanded, cutting through the rainforest.
The first Sumatran orangutan has now been caught on camera using one of the hanging bridges, SOS said in a statement sent to AFP yesterday.
While other species including gibbons and long-tailed macaques have also been spotted crossing there, โthis is a world first for Sumatran orangutans,โ it added.
The bridgeโs use by the orangutan was a โhuge milestone for conservationโ, SOS chief executive Helen Buckland said.
โThese canopy bridges demonstrate that human development and wildlife donโt have to be at odds. Sometimes, the simplest solutions are the most effective,โ Buckland added.
The road is an important social and economic link for communities in Sumatraโs Pakpak Bharat district.
But it has also split a population of some 350 orangutans, SOS said.
Erwin Alamsyah Siregar, executive director at Tangguh Hutan Khatulistiwa, said that habitat fragmentation was โone of the greatest challenges in contemporary conservationโ.
He said he hoped canopy bridges would become a โstandard featureโ of infrastructure planning across the region.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies Sumatran orangutans, endemic to the island of Sumatra, as critically endangered.
Their decline is blamed on habitat loss and fragmentation as well as illegal hunting.
In the wild, orangutans are found only on Sumatra and the nearby island of Borneo, which is shared between Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei. โ AFP
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