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         Orangutan:     more books (99)
  1. Orangutans: Geographic Variation in Behavioral Ecology and Conservation (Oxford Biology) by Serge A. Wich, S. Suci Utami Atmoko, et all 2010-02-28
  2. Orangutan (Heinemann Read and Learn: a Day in the Life: Rain Forest Animals) by Anita Ganeri, 2010-09
  3. The Mentalities of Gorillas and Orangutans: Comparative Perspectives
  4. Orangutans (Asian Animals) (Pebble Plus: Asian Animals) by Joanne Mattern, 2010-02-01
  5. The great apes;: The natural life of chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans, and gibbons by Robert Gray, 1969
  6. Animal Lives: Orangutans (Qeb Animal Lives) by Teacher Created Resources Staff, 2007-01-23
  7. Orang-utan Baby: Blue Level (I Love Reading) by Monica Hughes, 2006-06-15
  8. Little Sibu: An Orangutan Tale by Sally Grindley, 1999-03
  9. Orangutans (Monkey Discovery Library) by Lynn M. Stone, 1990-10
  10. The Red Ape: Orangutans and Human Origins by Jeffrey H. Schwartz, 2005-01-04
  11. The Malay Archipelago, the Land of the Orang-Utan and the Bird of Paradise; A Narrative of Travel, With Studies of Man and Nature by Alfred Russel Wallace, 2010-09-05
  12. Orangutans: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation by Junaidi Payne, Cede Prudente, 2008-03-31
  13. Orangutan Odyssey by Birute Mary Galdikas, 1999-10-01
  14. Orang-utans (QED Animal Lives) by Sally Morgan, 2007-06-01

21. Www.ns.net/orangutan/

http://www.ns.net/orangutan/

22. The Balikpapan Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS)
Supporting the orangutans and their reintroduction to their natural habitat in Kalimantan. Site includes profile, news, informations on orangutans and background environmental information about Kalimantan.
http://www.redcube.nl/bos/
Welcome to the website with all the nice orangutans,
the site of
The Balikpapan Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOS) news latest news older news Spotlights Willie's Corner archive about BOS what is BOS what we do Wanariset Nyaru Menteng orangutans threats processes some stories baby boom picture galleries humans our faces research Wanariset ORP background the rain forest year report 2000 finances how to help how to help membership sponsorship wishlist interact hyperlinks contact contact +++ news +++ new +++ news +++ new +++ news +++ They keep on coming
Nyaru Menteng, March 2003 Since my last appeal a month or so ago nothing has changed. We have received yet another 8 tiny infants of which 4 (5) are from the Katingan River and 3 from the Mantaya River immediately west of the Katingan, and most of them are not in good shape. More kids on the block
Nyaru Menteng, March 2003 Bonita arrived on Nyaru Menteng on 11th January 2003. Her age is estimated at 2 or 2 ½ years old. She had already had 2 owners - the 2nd one told us that he did not have her for a very long time and that she probably "only" spent some 7 months in captivity. Although we cannot check this story, it is a fact that Bonita is rather wild. +++ stop the slaughter +++ stop the slaughter +++ stop the slaughter +++ stop the slaughter +++ stop the slaughter +++ Help us stop the slaughter
January 31st, 2003

23. Sumatran Orangutan Society • Image Gallery •
. 41/40 The feeding platform. . .
http://www.orangutans-sos.org/picgallery/source/41.html
41/40: The feeding platform

24. CNN - Married Orangutan Couple Takes Next Step: Parenthood - Jan. 23, 1997
CNN.com
http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9701/23/orangutan/
Married orangutan couple takes next step: parenthood
January 23, 1997
Web posted at: 10:58 p.m. EST (0358 GMT) BANGKOK (CNN) Thailand's only married orangutan couple are well on their way towards forming a full-fledged nuclear family. Zuzu and Mike are now a mother and father after Zuzu gave birth to a male baby ape late Tuesday night. The delivery, expected for weeks, took place at Lopburi Zoo, 70 miles north of Bangkok. Hundreds of people have flocked to the zoo to see the primate family. The happy couple made headlines last year when Zuzu, an 8-year-old orangutan, was flown from Taiwan to marry Mike a lonely ape who needed a mate. Now zoo officials are passing out cigars. "We had champagne and a big celebration," said one of Zuzu's doctors. Reuters contributed to this report.
Related story:
Related sites:
Note: Pages will open in a new browser window External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive. Tell us what you think!

25. Cross Kalimantan Home Page
telekomunikasi, camel trophy, orangutan, dan jungle adventure.
http://www.rad.net.id/users/personal/c/crosskal/
Cross Kalimantan Home Pages
Contents :
PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia's High Capacity Digital Radio Telecommunication Project to connect all main cities in Kalimantan . Almost 100 Digital Radio Terminal/Repeater will be built from Sambas to Nunukan. Related Site :
Lucent Divnet-Telkom
A combination of adventure, expedition, competition and a unique challenge of personal courage and resilience. Camel Trophy is held at a different location in the world each year. See the stories of 1996 expedition from the depth, wet jungles of Kalimantan Related Site :
Atlas Land Rover 4x4 4 u Screensaver ...
The best known animals in Tanjung Puting National Park are the orangutans, made famous through the efforts of Orangutan Research and Conservation Program, which is based at the landmark Camp Leakey research station.Orangutans are a species under continual threat of extinction in the wild due to habitat loss as forests of Kalimantan and Sumatra are being converted for human use. Related Site :
Orangutan by IBC Online Sepilok Orangutan Foundation
The trip from Pontianak to Samarinda includes jungle trekking through some of the most inaccessible virgin rainforest left on the planet, a crossing of the Great Central divide, deep river exploration and white-water rafting in traditional long boats. Following the equator, encountering remote dayak villages, and rare wildlife such as freshwater dolphins and baby orang-utans.

26. The Orangutan Network
The orangutan Network was also represented and this website will be used as thebasis for the orangutan cultures database and the discussion among the
http://www.orangutannetwork.net/workshop.htm

ON Home
Field Site Map Field Site List ON Information ... Survey
©Serge Wich
T he Orangutans Compared Workshop was held in San Francisco, CA from February 14th to the 17th of 2002. It was funded by the Leakey Foundation. The Participants included field researchers from Bukit Lawang Camp Leakey Danum Valley Gunung Palung ... Lokan (David Agee, 1967-1971), Mentoko , Meratus, Setia Alam (OuTrop) SOCP Soraya Suaq Balimbing , Sungai Wain, and Wanariset . The Orangutan Network was also represented and this website will be used as the basis for the orangutan cultures database and the discussion among the researchers in the private forum. This workshop has resulted in an article in the January 3rd edition of Science.
Article:
Carel van Schaik

27. No Exit
An illegal pet industry in Indonesia is pushing orangutans to the brink of extinction in the wild
http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues02/sep02/orangutans.html
document.write(''); BOS USA Orangutan Foundation International
Click here
to see a clip from
The Disenchanted Forest
Buy
The Disenchanted Forest read full text No Exit An illegal pet industry in Indonesia is pushing orangutans to the brink of extinction in the wild The heat of the tropical sun and the smell of sweating bodies pervade the outdoor Jakarta animal market. Amid a cacophony of parrot chatter, the screams of monkeys and the barking of dogs, Willie Smits, dressed to look like a British oilman, and photographer Viviane Moos elbow their way through the crowd. Smits calls out in Indonesian, asking if anyone has orangutans for sale. The sea of people parts and a man appears with a red, furry baby orangutan clinging to his waist. "It's him," shouts one of the men in the crowd, recognizing Smits. As head of the largest orangutan rescue organization in the world, Smits is hated and feared by people who trade in orangutans and other exotic animals. Although it's illegal to own one of these orangy-red apes on the Southeast Asian islands of Borneo and Sumatra (their last natural refuges) and in many other places, trade in the primate is brisk. A big-bucks black market breeds violence, to which Smits is no stranger: he and his family frequently receive death threats. Even so, Smits continues to go to markets, confiscate orangutans and help police identify dealers in exotic animals. "Take her camera! Pull the film out. Hit them!" cries one of the men. Smits, 45, sees several others reaching for stilettos in their pockets. "I'll buy it," Smits shouts, momentarily confusing the traders and causing them to back off. Although he doesn't like to encourage the trade by making a purchase, Smits thrusts a stack of rupiah worth about $325 at the man with the orangutan, grabs the quivering animal and pulls Moos with him into the crowd. "You can't come back here again," Smits says to Moos, who has been photographing the whole time. "They could kill you."

28. Bukit Lawang/Gunung Leuser: Photos,travel Tips,orangutan Rehabilitation,jugle Tr
Photos, travel tips, orangutan rehabilitation, and jungle trekking.
http://www.dharssi.fsnet.co.uk/album/html/bukitlawang.html
Bukit Lawang / Gunung Leuser National Park
photos,map,transport,access,trekking,accomodation,food,costs
Many people come to Bukit Lawang to see Orangutans at the nearby rehabilitation center. Bukit Lawang is also a good base for jungle treks into the Gunung Leuser national park. The tourist town of Bukit Lawang is the main access point for the magnificent rainforest of the Gunung Leuser
Travel tips: practical details
  • Location: Northern Sumatra, nearest city is Medan. Bukit Lawang is situated about 80 km to the north-west of Medan.
  • map: north Sumatra
  • Getting there: There are frequent public mini-buses from Pinang Baris bus station, Medan (2 hour journey). Tourist mini-buses are also available, these will pick you up from your hotel but only run twice a day and are much more expensive than public mini-buses. Don't take the public bus as this will double the journey time.
  • Access: Provided you are accompanied by a licensed guide you can go trekking (walking) into the national park whenever you like, wherever you like for as long as you like. You also need a permit but this is just a formality to obtain. Guides tout for business at all the guesthouses, prices are negotiable.
  • Accommodation: Lots of guesthouses dotted along the Bohorok river, upstream places have cleaner water.

29. Jim Davies: Primatech
A cognitive model of Chantek, a signing orangutan, for an installation at Zoo Atlanta.
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/gvu/perception/projects/primatech/
Primatech
The goal of this project is to create an installation that simulates talking to a sign-language using orangutan. Please read the The June 1999 report and look at the diagram for a good overview. If you would like to contribute to this project, please contact Jim Davies (jimmydavies@usa.net)

30. The Australian Orangutan Project - AOP

http://www.orangutan.org.au/

31. Chaffee Zoo Of Fresno
Fresno. Formerly known as Roeding Park Zoo. Features include rainforest, orangutan and tiger exhibits, a reptile house, and an animal encounter area for children. Site has general information, education programs, zoo history, animal photos and 100+ scientific descriptions.
http://www.chaffeezoo.org
A Word from the Director
EACH OF US WAS BORN into a world of incredible diversity of animal and plant life. Throughout our lives most of us marvel at the diversity and uniqueness of life. We visit zoos and watch nature programs on television and are astounded by the strangeness of the creatures we see. I believe that future generations will judge us not by what we have created for them, but by what we have saved for them. Please carefully consider your children, grand-children, and great-grand-children, as you make decisions that affect the natural world. - Ralph Waterhouse, Director of Chaffee Zoo
Enter Here
Chaffee Zoo is an accredited member of the AZA Main Index
Animals
Visitor Info... ... Zoo Society
Contact us at: toucan@chaffeezoo.org Comments to the Webmaster: malunn@chaffeezoo.org

32. Www.animal-photos.co.uk
Tigers, lions, polar bears and orangutans photographed in the zoo.
http://www.animal-photos.co.uk/
Main page Kenyan safari Tigers Lions ...
Sign My Guestbook

On this site you will find photos of Tigers,Lions,Polar bears,orang-utans and other animals. The photos on this site are for your private use only. If you wish to publish them in any way, You must gain my permission first. Permission@animal-photos.co.uk
s="na";c="na";j="na";f=""+escape(document.referrer)

33. Department Of Archaeology, SFU, Faculty And Staff Information
Professor with the department of Archaeology. Heads the orangutan Foundation International. Research interests and program and courses offered.
http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology/dept/fac_bio/galdikas/
Tel.: (604) 291 3225; Fax.: (604) 291 5666; e-mail: galdikas@sfu.ca Courses offered 2002-1:
ARCH 131-3 Human Origins

ARCH 344-3 Primate Behavior

General Research Interests: Research specialties include studies of primate behavior, ecology, and evolution, with particular focus on orangutans . Other research interests involve tropical rain forest ecology and phenology.
Research Programs: Since 1971 research has been ongoing at the Orangutan research and conservation center in Tanjung Puting National Park, Indonesia. These studies have been specifically concerned with wild orangutan behavior, the development of orangutan conservation programs, and the re-introduction of captured individuals into the wild. Specific areas that have been investigated include orangutan subsistence, sociality, reproduction, cognitive potentials, communications and tool use. Other primate studies have been carried out on proboscus monkeys and macaques. A small number of SFU undergraduate students have been involved in field work at Tanjung Puting and PhD research by a SFU graduate student will begin in 1991.
Department of Archaeology

34. Gunung Palung Orangutan Project Main Page - Dr. Cheryl Knott
Home of the Gunung Palung orangutan Project. In addition it is home toa range of rare and endangered animals , including the orangutan.
http://www.geocities.com/gunungpalung/
...Home of the
Gunung Palung Orangutan Project
The Gunung Palung National Park is located on and around the Gunung Palung and Gunung Panti mountains in West Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia. This 90,000 hectare park is comprised of a diverse flora representing nearly every type of vegetation in Borneo, including beach and mangrove forests, peat and freshwater swamp forests, and endangered lowland dipterocarp forests. In addition it is home to a range of rare and endangered animals , including the orangutan.
Deep within the National Park lies Cabang Panti Research Camp, established by Mark Leighton in 1985. Cabang Panti, encompassing 2000 hectares has housed a diverse array of research projects including Dr. Cheryl Knott ’s Gunung Palung Orangutan Project, begun in 1994. At this time, the Gunung Palung project is one of the only functioning field sites for the study of wild orangutans. Because of the highly endangered status of orangutans, Dr. Knott and her research team are engaged in a variety of conservation efforts
All Photos © Tim Laman

35. MAPAYAH
Lembaga non pemerintah yang berkedudukan di Banda Aceh. Berkampanye untuk penyelamatan orangutan Sumatera.
http://www.geocities.com/lsm_mapayah/mpy.html
MAPAYAH Welcome to MAPAYAH Homepage
MASYARAKAT PENYAYANG ALAM DAN
LINGKUNGAN HIDUP (MAPAYAH)
Acheh Environment
Lover Society
MAPAYAH Menentang Setiap Kegiatan atau Aktivitas Manusia Yang Dapat Mengakibatkan Meningkatnya Derajat Degradasi Kualitas Lingkungan Hidup TENTANG MAPAYAH STAFF Amorphpohallus titanum KAMPANYE ORANGUTAN SUMATERA BERITA

36. All About Orangutans - EnchantedLearning.com
Tell your teachers about EnchantedLearning.com! orangutan Quiz to Printout,All About Apes All About orangutans, orangutan Coloring/Information Printout.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/apes/orangutan/
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All About Apes
All About Orangutans Orangutan Coloring/Information Printout Orangutans are large apes that live in southeast Asia (on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra). These apes mostly live in trees (they are arboreal) and swing from branch to branch using their arms. The word orangutan means "man of the forest" in the Malay language. As its habitats are being usurped by man, the orangutan's population is decreasing and it is in grave danger of extinction. ANATOMY Orangutans have a large, bulky body, a thick neck, very long, strong arms, short, bowed legs, and no tail. Orangutans are about 2/3 the size of the gorilla Hair They are mostly covered with long reddish-brown hair. The Head The orangutan has a large head with a prominent mouth area. Adult males have large cheek flaps (which get larger as the ape ages). Senses Orangutans have senses very similar to ours, including hearing, sight, smell, taste, and touch.

37. Sumatran Orangutan Society
Information about the Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelii), the threat to their survival and membership details.
http://www.orangutans-sos.org/
Welcome to the home of the S umatran
O rangutan
S ociety URGENT CAMPAIGN!
Sign the petition!

Sumatran orangutans are critically endangered. Habitat loss and poaching are pushing them towards imminent extinction. Please help us to help them.
Updated April 2003

38. Orangutan Printout- EnchantedLearning.com
orangutan Information, orangutan Pongo pygmaeus, orangutan hands are verymuch like ours; they have four long fingers plus an opposable thumb.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/apes/orangutan/Orangcoloring.shtml
Orangutan Information Orangutan
Pongo pygmaeus Animal Printouts
Label Me! Printouts

Orangutans are large, intelligent, solitary apes that live in southeast Asia (on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra). These apes mostly live in trees (they are arboreal ) and swing from branch to branch using their arms.
Anatomy : Orangutans have a large, bulky body, a large head, a thick neck, very long, strong arms, short, bowed legs, and no tail. They are mostly covered with long reddish-brown hair. Orangutan hands are very much like ours; they have four long fingers plus an opposable thumb. Their feet have four long toes plus an opposable big toe. They vary from 2.6 - 4.5 ft (0.8-1.4 m) tall.
Diet : Orangutans are omnivores (they eat both plants and animals) but are mostly herbivorous (plants comprise most of their diet). They eat fruit (their favorite food), leaves, seeds, tree bark, plant bulbs, plant shoots, and flowers. They also eat insects and small animals (like birds and small mammals). They drink water that has collected in the holes between tree branches.
EnchantedLearning.com

39. Animal Bytes: Orangutan
orangutan. Fast Facts. Common name orangutan, orangutan. Class Mammalia.Order Primate. Family Pongidae. Genus species Pongo
http://www.seaworld.org/AnimalBytes/orangutanab.html
Orangutan
Fast Facts
Common name: orangutan, orang-utan Class: Mammalia Order: Primate Family: Pongidae Genus species: Pongo (gorilla/orangutan) pygmaeus (small, dwarfish) Size: head and body length, male, .97 m (3.2 ft.); female .78 m (2.6 ft.) Weight: males up to 90 kg (198 lb.); females to 50 kg (110 lb.) Description: the only great ape from Asia. Taxonomy is disputed, formerly two subspecies: Bornean ( P. p. pygmaeus ) has a round face with dark red coat; Sumatran ( P. p. abelii ) has a long narrow face with paler longer hair. Adult males of both species have large cheek flaps. Life span: up to 50 years Sexual maturity: between 7 and 10 years of age Gestation: 260 to 270 days Habitat: Primary lowland swamp in Borneo and montane forest in northern Sumatra, Indonesia. Diet: fruit and other plant materials including leaves, bark, flowers, and nuts, occasionally insects and small mammals. Status: listed as endangered by USFWS and protected by CITES
Fun Facts
  • Unlike other great apes, orangutans are solitary by nature; this may be related to their need for large quantities of fruit which are dispersed throughout the forest.
    Even though they are able to walk upright for short distances, orangutans travel mostly by brachiating (swinging from one branch to another by the arms) through trees, using well-worn corridors in the forest canopy.
  • 40. Pongo Pygmaeus (Orangutan): Narrative
    Information about the orangutan from the University of Michigan's Diversity Web.
    http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/pongo/p._pygmaeus.html
    The University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Animal Diversity Web About us ... Glossary
    Pongo pygmaeus
    Orangutan
    Written by Debbie Ciszek and Maija Schommer Classification Table of Contents
    • Geographic Range
    • Physical Characteristics
    • Natural History
      Geographic Range
      Oriental : Orangutans currently inhabit only the islands of Sumatra and Borneo. Fossil evidence indicates that their past distribution included much of Southeast Asia.
      Physical Characteristics
      Mass: 30 to 90 kg. Orangutans are sexually dimorphic. Females range from 30 - 50 kg, while males are from 50 - 90 kg. Head and body length is about 1.5 meters and the arms have a spread of about 2.2 meters. They have a thin, shaggy coat that is reddish brown in color. Males have large cheek pads, which are made up of deposits of subcutaneous fat bound by connective tissue. These cheek pads continue growing for much of an adult male's life. Orangs have a high, sloping forehead and a bulging snout. They have short, weak legs, but strong hands and arms. Natural History
      Food Habits
      The diet consists mainly of fruit, especially figs. Various species of figs ripen at different times in the year, and the movement pattern of the animals can largely be explained by their following this process. Orangutans will also eat other kinds of vegetation, such as leaves, bark, buds, and flowers. They will also occasionally eat mineral-rich soil, insects, and possibly eggs and small vertebrates. They drink by reaching into tree holes and lapping water from their hands.

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