If you like this animal and find it particularly fascinating you can adopt it! Reproduction Gestation period is about eight to nine months. Females usually bear single young; twins are rare. Average birth weight is 3.5 pounds (1.6 kg). Females reproduce approximately every seven or eight years. Life Cycle Orangutan
- People of the Forest Rarely descending from trees, orangutans have nearly identical hook-shaped hands and feet that are well adapted for grasping and hanging from tree limbs. Young orangutans easily swing from limb to limb. Older, heavier adults must move through the forest slowly, using their hands and feet to test each branch to see if it will hold their weight. When required, however, an adult orangutan can move very fast. Social Organization - The Solitary
Life During courtship and mating, however, adult male and female orangutans travel and forage together. The long call of a dominant male, audible for up to a mile (1.6 km), announces his presence to females who are ready to mate. The call also scares away other, less dominant males. Females seek out the male to breed, but after a few days they separate and return to their solitary life.
Woodland Park Zoo's orangutan forest, located at the Trail of Vines exhibit in Tropical Asia, brings visitors eye-to-eye with orangutans in their treetop habitat. Visitors have an unobstructed view to observe orangutans as they may behave in the wild. The exhibit also has an indoor area complete with a "feeding station" similar to those at rehabilitation sites in the jungles of Sumatra and Borneo. These rehabilitation programs work with orangutans that have been confiscated from smugglers and private owners.
Orangutans are an endangered species.** Overpopulation, logging, agriculture and other human activities are rapidly destroying forest environments required by orangutans for survival. While population densities are hard to determine, estimates for the Bornean subspecies are 12,000-13,000 while the Sumatran subspecies has dwindled to a mere 6,500-7,500 animals. Recently, due to the 1997 drought caused by El Niño, nearly 2 million acres (800,000 h) of forest were destroyed by forest fires on the island of Borneo. This incredible ecological disaster means even less habitat for orangutans. Additionally, the economic stability of both Malaysia and Indonesia is suffering greatly due to the crash of their stock markets and value of their currencies. Both of these events mean orangutans need more support from conservationists than ever before. Woodland Park Zoo is involved in orangutan research and conservation in the wild. Zoo staff traveled throughout Indonesia doing tissue sampling of wild and captive orangutans. This study confirmed that the two orangutan subspecies are very different genetically, and should be managed separately and not allowed to interbreed. While the zoo's resident orangutans are hybrids (crossbred between Bornean and Sumatran subspecies), and therefore are not allowed to reproduce, these animals play a critical role in educating zoo professionals and the public about the amazing orangutan. As an example, the first orangutan in vitro fertilization was accomplished at Woodland Park Zoo. Although no offspring resulted, it was an important step in the continuing development of embryo transfer techniques. How You Can Help! Contact Woodland Park Zoo at webkeeper@zoo.org to find out about ways you can support conservation programs at the zoo. Discover more about endangered orangutans by visting the Balikpapan Orangutan Society web site. Learn other ways you can help conserve wildlife and the habitats they require for survival by visiting our How You Can Help page. Sources and Suggested
Reading Kaplan, Gisela & Rodgers, Lesley. 1994. Orang-utans in Borneo. University of New England Press, Armidale, NSW, Australia. 196 p. For Kids! * Taxonomic classification varies between references. Classification information used in this fact sheet was taken from Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic And Geographic Reference, edited by Don E. Wilson and Dee Ann M. Reeder, Second Edition, 1993. **Woodland Park Zoo identifies an animal or plant endangered if it is listed as endangered (in any part of its range) on the federal list of Endangered and Threatened Species, or if is listed on Appendix 1 of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). Frequently Asked Questions About Orangutans
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