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Zoo Atlanta: Sulango the Orangutan Breaks Out!

Monday, August 27th, 2007

14-year-old Sulango, one the of the male orangutans at Zoo Atlanta, escaped from his enclosure this weekend. he got over a wall and across a moat before zoo officials were alerted to his escape. No one was hurt, fortunately and zoo patrons were more astonished than afraid. Sulango was eventually sedated and taken back to his enclosure. Zoo officials are unsure how he managed this amazing feat…   Check out the full video report on cnn.com.

Watch Saving Planet Earth online

Friday, August 17th, 2007

The Saving Planet Earth program aired on BBC1 on 6th July, followed by a star-studded fundraising event at Kew Gardens hosted by Sir David Attenborough, Alan Titchmarsh and Graham Norton. The BBC Wildlife Fund has now raised over a million pounds from viewers of Saving Planet Earth, which will be distributed between the charities featured in the programs.

If you missed the program, or would simply like to watch it again, now you can at the BBC Saving Planet Earth website.

If you feel compelled to make a donation to help save orangutans, please do so here.

New Greenpeace UK campaign video: The Convenient Solution

Wednesday, August 1st, 2007

It might surprise you, but most of the UK’s CO2 emissions don’t come from electricity generation, or from transport. They come from domestic and industrial heating.

Nuclear power contributes almost nothing to our enormous heating needs; the bulk of the heat comes from burning gas, with a little help from coal and oil. In fact, nuclear power contributes less than four per cent to our overall energy needs. And building new nuclear power stations (as the government wants to do) at a cost of up to £40 billion won’t increase that contribution; the new power stations will just replace some of the old ones that are too old to operate safely.

It’s clear that if we want to stop climate change and ensure energy security, we need a solution that can contribute to heating and electricity generation.

See the campaign video on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfzVQwW_8Jk

See the full story: http://www.greenpeace.org.uk

Orangutan spits water to get peanut

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

04 July 2007
NewScientist.com news service
Roxanne Khamsi

Orang-utans are clever enough to use water as a problem-solving tool, an experiment inspired by Aesop’s fables has demonstrated.

When presented with a peanut floating deep down inside a transparent tube, the animals spat their drinking water into the tube to raise the treat to the top, where they could grab it (see video, right). Researchers say that the study is novel because it shows the insightful use of a liquid tool by a non-human primate.

Natacha Mendes at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, recalls that the idea for the study came out of a discussion with her colleagues about Aesop’s fables.

The team focused on one particular story, in which a clever crow throws stones into a pitcher to elevate the water to a level where the bird can access it for drinking. Mendes and her fellow researchers wondered whether the orang-utans they worked with could have a similarly smart insight.

Speedy learning

To test this out, the scientists presented five orang-utans (Pongo abelii) with clear plastic tubes, each containing a small amount of water along with a peanut. But, to the orang-utans’ great dismay, the peanuts floated too far down the tube for them to reach.

The frustrated apes tried everything they could to get to the peanuts – including biting, hitting, and kicking the tube.

It only took them about nine minutes on average, though, to figure out that a little bit of extra water could do the trick. At this point the orang-utans began taking mouthfuls of water from their drink dispenser and spitting the liquid into the tube, a trick that elevated the peanuts to an accessible point.

“This seems to be insightful behaviour because they haven’t seen this test before,” Mendes explains. “And as soon as they got the idea they continued to do it.”

And do it faster, Mendes adds. She presented each orang-utan with the peanut-containing tube 10 times. By the tenth attempt, it took the animals only 30 seconds before they started spitting water into the tube.

Intelligent spitting

Researchers also conducted control experiments, including one in which they taped the peanut to the top of the tube. The orang-utans did not spit into the tube, but instead simply grabbed the treat with their hands.

Mendes notes that archer fish (Toxotes jaculatrix) can spit water at flies to knock them into the water for eating (see Fast food for fish with perfect aim). But she says the orang-utans’ use of water represents a more sophisticated behaviour.

“There’s no comparison,” she says, pointing out that the apes have a conscious idea of what they are doing and consider other options, such as kicking the tube. “With orang-utans we are talking about a flexible strategy – that’s the big difference.”

Journal reference: Biology Letters (DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2007.0198)

Source: http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn12182&feedId=online-news_rss20

Campaign attacks Government’s biofuels policy

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

Originally posted 9 May, 2007 — video link added 7 June, 2007
By Clemmie Gleeson

A COALITION of some of UK’s most powerful environmental groups has launched an advertising campaign attacking the Government’s biofuels policy.

See the campaign video on YouTube


Go directly to Friends of the Earth’s Campaign site

The adverts, which have been placed in national newspapers feature a petrol pump being held to the head of an orang-utan. The slogan says: “Tell the Government to choose the right biofuel. Or the orang-utan gets it.”The groups including Friends of the Earth, RSPB, Greenpeace and WWF-UK believe that the UK Government’s Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (ReTFO) could, in its present form, lead to biofuel production causing the destruction of rainforests and wetlands.They are demanding that the ReTFO is tightened up to ensure that biofuel producers meet minimum greenhouse gas and sustainability standards. They also want to see environmental audits introduced for the whole life-cycle of the fuels, from growing the crops to burning the fuel in the car.The adverts ask members of the public to write to Government and demand tough, compulsory standards.

It comes after the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report last week stating that protecting the world’s forests is one of the single biggest steps the international community can take to lessen the effects of climate change.

John Alker, senior public affairs officer at WWF-UK said that biofuels could offer part of the solution to climate change: “But Government needs to get this policy right in order to do so.”

Dr Douglas Parr, chief scientist at Greenpeace described the ReTFO as ‘complacent’. “It could see biofuel production wrecking the climate rather than helping it. The Government must sort out this botched plan or risk losing the value that biofuels could offer.”

Ed Matthew from Friends of the Earth said that the Government has got its priorities wrong. “Its biofuels proposals are so weak that they are in real danger of increasing global warming emissions, not reducing them.”

Meanwhile, Dr Mark Avery, conservation director at the RSPB, said that without environmental standards, biofuels are ‘a green con’.

Read the original post here:
http://www.farmersguardian.com/story.asp?sectioncode=1&storycode=9542

Go directly to Friends of the Earth’s Campaign site

Orangutan Mama Video — Must See!!!

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

Quantum Shift

http://www.quantumshift.tv/v/1178084064/

The orangutan is on the verge of extinction due to poaching and habitat loss. Now deep in the heart of Borneo orangutans and Dayaks, the local aboriginal people, have come together in a unique program. Dayak women have become surrogate mothers to hundreds of orphaned orangutans.

This is a story of sacrifice and salvation, tragedy and hope as mothers from simple backgrounds join together with international scientists to save the vanishing orangutan.

Running time 3:30 minutes

Groundbreaking Research Has Scientists Talking With Apes

Thursday, May 31st, 2007

Hello, How Are You Doing?
Groundbreaking Research Has Scientists Talking With Apes
By JOHN BERMAN

May 29, 2007 —

The Great Ape Trust in Des Moines, Iowa, is home to seven bonobos — a close relative of the chimpanzee — and three orangutans. But if you think Iowa might be a strange place for them to live, don’t say it out loud & these apes understand English.

Really. No kidding.

Watch John Berman’s interview with a bonobo tonight on “World News With Charles Gibson”

You can talk to the apes, and they know what you are saying.

The residents of the Great Ape Trust are part of groundbreaking language research where the apes are being taught to communicate with humans by pressing 350 lexigrams — symbols that appear on a screen and represent thoughts and objects.

The superstar is 26-year-old Kanzi, whom Bill Fields has been working with for years. To communicate, Fields speaks to Kanzi, who then points to the lexigrams to respond and demonstrate a level of understanding.

“Qualitatively, there is no difference between Kanzi’s language and my language,” Fields said. “It’s a matter of degree.”

The key to ensuring they grasp the language, the researchers said, is to start teaching them when they are young, just like you would with human babies.

“Language is culturally acquired. Its not learned,” said Fields. “It’s acquired in the immediate postnatal antogyny of the organisms life. The only organism capable of learning language are babies.”

They’ve been communicating with bonobos through the keyboard for almost three years, relying on a technique developed in 1971 and also used at the Primate Research Institute at Kyoto University and other facilities.

At the Great Ape Trust, researchers said the apes would likely never be able to vocalize words like humans; they are limited by the range of their vocal chords among other things.

However, Fields swears he has heard Kanzi try to say “thank you.”

‘Surprise’ From an Interview With an Ape

When they begin to work with the apes, some pick up the vocabulary quickly while others never acquire the language.

Rob Shumaker has known Azy, a majestic, huge male orangutan, for more than 20 years. He talks to Azy, just like he would speak to one of his children, or a longtime friend.

“When I’m around them we just kind of talk normally,” he explained. “I use my normal vocabulary, my normal voice my normal gestures.”

Sound beyond belief? During a visit to the Great Ape Trust, I sat down with Kanzi the Bonobo — the first Ape I have ever interviewed.

I read Kanzi a series of words, and then without fail, he hit the corresponding lexigram symbol on a touch screen.

I said “Egg.”

He pressed “Egg.”

I said, “M and M.”

He pressed “M and M.”

Then Kanzi took control of the conversation and pressed the symbol for “Surprise!”

Needless to say, I was quite surprised, having never actually spoken to an ape before.

But Kanzi was pointing to a box of candy that I was sitting near. That is the surprise that he wanted.

Moments like this are proof that these conversations help scientists learn about apes, from the apes themselves.

“If we have some common means of communicating with each other,” said Shumaker , ” we suddenly have exponentially large number of topics that we can explore.”

“It allows Kanzi to tell me if his stomach hurts, his head hurts or if he’d like to be alone or if he’s afraid or scared,” Fields added.

Speaking Up for Their Survival

There’s another possible impact of the communication with these apes: These celebrity apes may help raise awareness of the plight of apes in the wild.

Shumaker said there is an estimated 10,000 to 50,000 bonobos left in the wild, and 50 - 55,000 orangutans in the wild, so raising awareness of just how smart these creatures are might encourage the public to take their problems more seriously.

“The research we conduct here powerfully informs people about the nature of great ape intelligence,” Shumaker said. “We know that humans and great apes share far more than they differ. I think we have to recognize that. If that does not compel us to preserve great apes in the wild, I don’t know what can.”

The insight into ape learning might also give some insight into human development.

“It tells us about how we learn everything,” said Fields, “what the antecedents are to the kind of powerful learning that could occur in humans.”

Sometimes the similarities to humans are downright eerie. When I asked Kanzi if he wanted coffee, he enthusiastically shook his head up and down.

Bonobos share 98 percent of their DNA with humans — they also apparently share a love of decaf caramel machiatos.

For more information contact the www.greatapetrust.org.

Source: ABC News
http://abcnews.go.com/WN/Technology/Story?id=3222942&page=1

BOS Nyaru Menteng on NBC Today Show, Monday 14th May

Monday, May 14th, 2007

Recently, presenter Ann Curry and the Today show team visited the BOS Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Project to find out what is being done to save the orangutan from extinction in the face of the growing demand for palm oil. The feature will be broadcast in North America Monday, 14th May. (Check your local listing for times).

Click here to see the clip

Podcasts are also available from the NBC Today website: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8132577/

A slide show can be seen here: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18589782/.

Click here to go to the blog

Spread the word, and be sure to tune in yourself!

Group Trying to Save Endangered Orangutans

Monday, May 7th, 2007

By Nia Sutadi
Santa Monica, California
30 April 2007

Watch Orangutan report / Real broadband - download video clip
Watch Orangutan report / Real broadband video clip
Watch Orangutan report / Real dialup - download video clip
Watch Orangutan report / Real dialup video clip

Orangutans are highly intelligent and are one of man’s closest relatives. Found primarily in Indonesia, their name in English means “People of the Forest.” Just a century ago, their numbers were plentiful, but deforestation, illegal hunting and natural disasters have left these large, red apes on the verge of extinction. A group in the western state of California is working to save orangutans and the habitats they live in. It is called the Orang Utan Republik (OUR) Education Initiative and it is working to get Americans and Indonesians involved in saving Indonesia’s orangutans. For producers Vena Anissa and Nia Sutadi, VOA’s Jim Bertel has more.

A baby orangutan
A baby orangutan

Gary Shapiro has spent more than 30 years studying orangutans, spending many years in Indonesia where he taught sign language to ex-captive orangutans in the wild. Three years ago, Shapiro and his Indonesian wife Inggriani began Orang Utan Republik, an environmental organization working to save orangutans from extinction.

“Our goal is to inspire, to empower Indonesian people to be in charge to save the orangutan,” said Inggriani. “We invite them to participate through educational programs in art and science.”

Gary Shapiro
Gary Shapiro

“The orangutan is an umbrella-species; if we can preserve orangutans, we can also preserve other animals that are threatened with extinction,” added Gary. “And we hope that Indonesians will learn the place of the orangutan in the ecosystem, so that they will care what happens to them and we will be able to preserve the orangutan forever.”

The Shapiros spend Sundays at Santa Monica, California’s farmer’s market educating people about orangutans and their habitat.

Inngriani Shapiro
Inngriani Shapiro

“An adult female orangutan usually gets pregnant every seven years,” explains Inggriani. “It takes such a long time for an orangutan mother to teach its offspring to survive in the forest. If the offspring are continually separated from their mothers, eventually the species will become extinct.”

Nicky Coleman, who once visited an orangutan rehabilitation center in Indonesia, supports the Shapiro’s efforts. “Some people just don’t realize what they are doing to the environment, but if you can bring awareness and show them, they maybe think twice and make some changes in their life style.”

An orangutan in the wild
An orangutan in the wild

While most of the estimated 57,000 orangutans in the wild are found in Indonesia, the Shapiros believe people around the world need to be educated about orangutans and their role in the tropical ecosystem in order to pressure Indonesians to do more to protect these creatures.

“I have been concerned about the orangutan for a long time,” says Gary. “And like my adopted ‘child,’ an orangutan named Princess, I want a world where orangutans can live freely in the forest. And hopefully her children and grandchildren will also be able to live that way in Indonesia forever.”

Some footage provided by Orang Utan Republik

Read the original story here:
http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-04-30-voa43.cfm

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