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Endangered Species in Indonesia

Username By Barrie | November 2nd, 2007 | Comments 1 Comment »

The government has said it is having difficulties identifying the number of native species in danger of extinction. Director for biological diversity affairs at the Forestry Ministry, Toni Suhartono, said much of the existing information on the number of endangered species was based on predictions made before 2000.

“The inventory data on endangered species is a classic problem. Even we don’t have exact data on the animal species kept in the country’s zoos,” Toni told a dialog on orangutan population here Thursday.

He said the conservation of endangered species had yet to become an important issue for government officials and the public.

“The nation’s awareness, including among government officials, of the conservation of endangered species is very low. It is, therefore, not easy for us to propose budgets for conservation programs,” Toni said.

He said conservation activists should set up groups to investigate endangered species.

“We get updated data on the number of elephants from the community who set up a forum known as the Elephant Forum,” he said.

Toni said the Elephant Forum said there were between 2,400 and 2,800 elephants across the country. “It is much lower than the previous prediction of 8,000 animals.”

Internationally, endangered species are protected from trade through the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES).

More than 140 countries, including Indonesia, have ratified the convention.

Indonesia’s orangutan are on the list of animals that may not be traded under the convention.

Hardi Baktiantoro, director of the Center for Orangutan Protection, said the number of orangutan in the wild had declined rapidly due to massive habitat destruction and illegal trafficking.

“The habitat destruction from rampant illegal logging and forest fires are the greatest threat to orangutan in Indonesia,” he said.

Hardi said when forests were burnt, female orangutan were often killed, while the juveniles were caught to be used as pets or sold.
He said that a juvenile was sold for about US$40,000 abroad, compared to between Rp 100,000 (US$11) and Rp 500,000 ($55) in Kalimantan.

He said that about 30 orangutans from Indonesia had been found in Thailand, the Philippines and South Korea.

“But no law enforcement has been taken yet to resolve the problem,” he said.

“To make it worse, local administrations continue to issue new permits to convert forests, including for palm oil plantations.”

The government is currently drafting a plan to protect the endangered species in the country.

“We will target rehabilitating about 50 percent of endangered species by 2025,” Toni said.

He said that there were about 88 animal species in Indonesia in danger of extinction, including the orangutan, Javanese monkey and Sumatran tiger.

Adianto P. Simamora

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One Response to “Endangered Species in Indonesia”

Mychael Clarson | January 15th, 2009 at 1:34 pm | comment link
top comment

Mychael Clarson
P. O. Box 1112
Long Beach, Washington 98631-1112
splugy@centurytel.net
360-244-1545

Thursday, January 15, 2009

I am writing about an environmental disaster that is occurring right now. I don’t know how it can be stopped before permanent damage is done. The problem is overfishing in a remote lake in Indonesia.

Lake Toba is on the island of Sumatra. It is an ancient volcano caldera over 100 miles long. There is a large island in the lake named Samosir. I spend half each year there.

When most people think of Indonesia they think of houses with turned up roofs. This image is of the Batak people who are located on Samosir. They fish for part of their sustenance.

One prominent family has discovered that lights attract the small fish in the lake. They have built more than 50 barges equipped with large lights pointed down into the water near the town of Tolping.

The fish are attracted to the lights and are caught in net traps beneath the barges. Electric wires are run to the nearest house or building that has electricity. Sooner or later someone is going to be electrocuted.

In the mean time sustenance fishers are coming up dry. The fish count in the lake is crashing. It appears that this family will continue this rape of the lake until there are no more fish. It also appears that they don’t care who they starve to death, either.

The local villages have protested to the local police but were refused.. It seems that the fix is in and this ecological disaster will continue until all the light sensitive species are extinct.

This is a very ancient landlocked lake. The International Lake Environmental Committee has stated that the total fish catch was declining by 5.13% each year BEFORE this overfishing began.

This family is still building barges at the rate of one every 3 days. They are made out of oil drums which are not emptied completely and leak oil everywhere.

I am writing to everyone I can find looking for some way to stop this raping of the environment before it is too late. If you have any ideas please let me know.

Thanks!

Very truly yours,

Mychael Clarson
360-244-1545
splugy@centurytel.net

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