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OUR LATEST STORIES

We are working hard to protect the Bornean orangutan and its habitat for future generations. Here are some of the ways we've helped develop a world where orangutans and nature thrive.

POST-RELEASE MONITORING

HOPE YOU GROWING UP WELL, AYU!

Ayu is a young orangutan who was born in the Kehje Sewen Forest, East Kalimantan, to  mother Lesan, a rehabilitated orangutan who was released to the wild 10 years ago.

ECOSYSTEM CONSERVATION

ENCROACHMENT THREATENS OU CONSERVATION IN NEW CAPITAL AREA

The plan to develop the new capital city (IKN) of Nusantara which was launched by the Indonesian government has become a hot discussion topic on a national and international level. An area of 56,180 hectares spread in two regencies in East Kalimantan

POST-RELEASE MONITORING

SAYANG AND PADMA SURPRISE THE TEAM!

Last September, our Post-Release Monitoring (PRM) team from Camp Lesik, in the northern part of the Kehje Sewen Forest, East Kalimantan, conducted a routine phenology survey. Phenology involves observing how living things respond to changes in the...

UNRELEASEABLE ORANGUTANS

DILLA FINDING HER OWN WAY

Up until the beginning of this year, Dilla was still enjoying adventures with Dius, a male orangutan from Badak Besar Island that our team temporarily placed on Badak Kecil Sanctuary Island, after he had managed to cross off the island several times.

ECOSYSTEM CONSERVATION

FOREST-FOOD FAVOURITES FOR ORANGUTANS

While orangutans are referred to as frugivores, with fruit as their primary food source, they are recorded to be able to consume 2,000 different types of foods in the forest. In addition to fruit, orangutans also eat grasses, leaves, bark, flowers...

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