The Bukit Tigapuluh Ecosystem in Central Sumatra is home to a very special population of Sumatran orangutans.
It’s very important that the people living in and around forest ecosystems are empowered to protect their local environment to provide clean air, water and earth and to sustain forests, rivers and oceans. Protecting and restoring all these elements is vital for community development and stability.
When Charlotte was kidnapped from the jungle as a baby, she didn’t only lose her freedom that day.
Over 80% of orangutans live in unprotected forests. This puts them at an even greater risk of extinction because their forest habitat can be converted to plantations, logging concessions, mining and other agriculture.
Illegal plantations and encroachment are a huge threat for orangutan forest, even in protected areas. The Orangutan Project supports organisations that have reclaimed illegal plantations and chopped down thousands of oil palm trees, rubber trees and other illegal crops. These areas are then secured and restored.
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