Another Orangutan Baby Comes to Our Rehabilitation Centre

In mid-May, our rescue team from Nyaru Menteng again joined hands with the Central Kalimantan BKSDA to conduct the rescue of a female baby orangutan in Pangkoh village, Pulang Pisau Regency. The baby was kept for several days by a villager before being reported to the Central Kalimantan BKSDA office. The villager claimed to have found the baby stranded alone in a forest area near a palm-oil plantation, and had decided to take her home. During captivity, the orangutan was treated like a human baby: she was bathed and dressed in baby clothing.

Upon receiving the report, a joint rescue team from the Central Kalimantan Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA) and BOS Foundation’s Central Kalimantan Orangutan Reintroduction Program quickly headed to Pangkoh village to rescue the baby orangutan and take her to the Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Rescue and Rehabilitation Centre.

An initial health check conducted by our accompanying vet revealed that the baby had not sustained any injuries and was in good physical health.

Latest Update on The New Baby

Almost a month after her arrival, this very young baby orangutan – estimated to be about 3 months old – is still undergoing quarantine at Nyaru Menteng. Thus far, there have been signs of positive progress; she has gained some weight and will actively play in the quarantine facility’s playground area. She really loves to play with the leaves provided by babysitters, or with her blanket in the mornings. Understandably, she still relies heavily on our babysitters, and requires a lot of reassuring hugs and warmth: In the wild, a baby orangutan at this age would be clinging to its mother for breastfeeding and warmth.

The baby is now under the observation and constant care of our veterinary team and dedicated babysitters at Nyaru Menteng. She now weighs 2.6 kg, and regularly consumes milk and mashed-up fruit. We will make sure, as with all the other orangutans in our care, that this baby will be placed in the best possible environment for optimum, healthy growth and skill development, so one day she will be able to return to the wild.

It is extremely heart-breaking to see that baby orangutans are still being separated from their mothers and losing their right to learn from them how to survive in the wild. If we fail to stop the deforestation that is destroying orangutan habitats at an alarming rate, and fail to enforce the laws that protect wildlife, orangutans will become extinct. We simply cannot allow this to happen!

Text by: BOS Foundation Communication Team

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