Work Supported in 2003-2004
Balikpapan Orangutan Survival Foundation – Indonesia (BOS-Indonesia)
and the Balikpapan Orangutan Survival Foundation – USA (BOS-USA)
BOS-Indonesia and BOS-USA are both nonprofit environmental organizations
that support conservation of orangutans and their habitats.
Specifically, BOS-Indonesia 1) supports the Indonesian Ministry
of Forestry in the field of law enforcement 2) sponsors rehabilitation
and reintroduction programs for confiscated orangutans on the
island of Borneo 3) supports educational activities for school
children, focusing on nature conservation and orangutans and 4)
sets up new protected areas in Indonesia. BOS-Indonesia is also
involved in preparatory work for setting up the new Meratus National
Park, as well as efforts for a new debt for nature swap for an
important swamp forest area where wild orangutans still have a
chance to survive in the wild. BOS-Indonesia also works closely
with local people to teach them better ways of land use that do
not destroy or burn forests, while providing higher sustainable
income.
BOS-USA is an independent U.S. nonprofit organization, formed
to support orangutan conservation and to raise awareness of the
plight of the orangutan. BOS-USA supports the following projects
in the field:
Wanariset
Orangutan Rehabilitation Center
Gunung
Palung Orangutan Conservation Project
Nyaru
Menteng Orangutan Rehabilitation Center
Project
Hutan
The Great Ape Trust has made contributions to BOS-USA for conservation
education purposes and funded professional interactions for in
situ conservation action and ethics for BOS-Indonesia. Additionally,
Lead Scientist Robert Shumaker serves on the Science Advisory
Board of BOS– Indonesia and the Advisory Board of BOS – USA.
Golden Lion Tamarin Reintroduction
Great Ape Trust is joining the Frankfurt Zoological Society as
a supporter of the reintroduction of golden lion tamarins (GLTs).
Benjamin Beck, Great Ape Trust Director of Conservation, has served
as coordinator of this program in Brazil since 1983. During those
two decades, 153 GLTs drawn from zoos and research centers from
more than a dozen countries on three continents have been reintroduced
into remnants of Brazil’s Atlantic Coastal Rainforest. The
reintroduced GLT population reached 550 in 2003, due to reproduction.
This is more than one-third of all GLTs now living in the wild
in Brazil. These GLTs live in the Poço das Antas Biological
Reserve (created specifically to save the last wild GLTs) and
on 26 privately owned ranches surrounding Poço das Antas.
These ranches constitute more than a third of protected habitat
available for wild GLTs and all of the other animals and plants
that make up this ecosystem.
A major challenge at this juncture is to link up the Reserve
and all of these isolated ranches so that wild and reintroduced
GLTs can move freely and interbreed. An ambitious program to plant
interlinking corridors of native trees is underway and monitoring
the use of these corridors by the reintroduced population is a
new initiative for the reintroduction team.
Another change is that while we will continue to try to monitor
individuals and groups in the reintroduced population, we are
purposively embarking on a five-year plan that will change our
emphases from intensive behavioral data collection of provisioned
groups with known composition, to population-wide monitoring of
less habituated groups whose composition will be recorded twice
per year. This has become the only cost-effective option for tracking
the size and distribution of such a rapidly growing population.
GIS/GPS technology is being used to follow the GLTs’ habitat
use and changes in the area of available habitat.
Kamwenge Alleviation of Wood Resources and Environment
Great Ape Trust contributes to the Kamwenge Alleviation of Wood
Resources and Environment (KAWRE), a three-year project in Uganda.
Only 40% of forest/woodland in Uganda is formally protected. The
balance is privately or publicly owned and forest cover is being
rapidly depleted for charcoal manufacture, harvest for construction
beams, and clearing for grazing. Reforestation is virtually non-existent
and demand is increasing. The resultant pressure on protected
areas impacts a variety of forest-dwelling wildlife, including
chimpanzees and gorillas. KAMRE’s goals include 1) survey
of all remaining tropical high forest, 2) community needs assessment
for wood resources, 3) public education concerning forest conservation,
reforestation, and sustainable use, 4) priority reforestation
of selected sites suffering serious erosion, fuel wood shortage
and water shortage due to clear-cutting, 5) enlistment and training
of local residents for tree nursery care, tree planting and care,
and tree species selection, 6) mobilization in local communities
for long-term forest conservation and regeneration, with 7) special
involvement of disadvantaged groups (women, disabled, young people,
HIV/AIDS sufferers). The research and community training is conducted
primarily by staff of the Makerere University Biological Field
Station. Great Ape Trust contributions support KAMRE, a local
NGO founded by Babiiha John and currently coordinated by Tinka
John. KAMRE is a group of local stakeholders (e.g. park managers,
agriculturalists, women’s groups, ecotourism operators,
local officials) whose implementation efforts complement the technical
efforts of the Field Station. There are measurable outputs, and
future support will depend on progress toward these goals.
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