KOTA KINABALU: Bornean
orangutans experienced a major demographic decline and local extirpation during
the Pleistocene (2,558,000 to 12,000 years ago) and Holocene (from 12,000 years
to the present) due to climate change, the arrival of modern humans, of farmers
and recent commercially-driven habitat loss and fragmentation.
This is the main conclusion
of a recent paper published in the scientific journal PLOS ONE by a team of
scientists from the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência (IGC, Portugal), the
Anthropological Institute and Museum of the University of Zürich (Switzerland),
the CNRS (France), Cardiff University (UK) and the Danau Girang Field Centre
(DGFC, Sabah).
“The recent loss of habitat
and its dramatic fragmentation has affected the patterns of genetic variability
and differentiation among the remaining population of orangutans and increased
the extinction risk of the most isolated ones,” said Dr Reeta Sharma from IGC,
the lead author of the paper.
“We used orangutan samples
collected in six different study sites in Sabah (Kinabatangan and Danum Valley)
and Kalimantan and genetic markers to identify signals of population decline,”
added Sharma.
Dr Benoit Goossens, director
of DGFC and a co-author on the paper, said that the dating of the population
decline varied across sites but was always within the 200-2,000 years period.
He said this suggests that
in some sites at least, orangutan populations were affected by demographic
events that started before the recent anthropogenic effects that occurred in
Borneo.
“However, these results do
not mean that the recent forest exploitation did not leave its genetic mark on
orangutans but suggests that the genetic pool of orangutans is also impacted by
more ancient events,” suggested Goossens.
According to him, the
orangutan population in the Lower Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary is an example
of a recent collapse due to anthropogenic pressure which culminated 50 years
ago.
“The recent findings
complement those published in 2006 by our team on the Kinabatangan population
and underscore the need to expand the conservation measures that we are
suggesting in our recent Orangutan Action Plan, such as protection of private
lands to connect the existing protected forest lots, corridor establishment,
wildlife monitoring and law enforcement.
“This need was emphasised by
Datuk Masidi Manjun, Minister of Tourism, Culture and Environment, when he
recently asked for a moratorium on any new land development in the Kinabatangan
floodplain during the closing remarks of the Sabah Orangutan Conservation
Dialogue held in Kota Kinabalu at the end of October,” Goossens added. (BP)
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