Come hang and race to save orangutans
3 November 2011

Auckland Zoo is inviting visitors to 'Come hang like an orangutan'
at a weekend of festivities on 12 and 13 November, and to take part
in The Great Ape
Race on 17 November, in celebration of Orangutan Caring Week
(12 - 20 November).
The weekend activities include daily 12.30pm encounters for
visitors to see these incredibly agile great apes in action, find
out about why they are so endangered and how we can all help them
just by shopping palm-oil free.
Children will be able to hang like an orangutan on the kids'
bungy trampolines, have their face painted, and with the grown-ups,
watch trapeze artists performing orangutan-styled sets.
Sample bags of palm oil-free goodies will be available to the
first 500 visitors for a gold coin donation, and everyone can enter
the draw to win a shopping trolley full of palm oil-free
groceries.
Later in the week, those
with a competitive streak can get a team of two to four people
together for The Great Ape
Race, which the Zoo is running with help from its friends at
Lactic Turkey Events. This fun 'oranguteering' event around the Zoo
on Thursday 17 November (5.30pm to 9pm) is a Zoo fundraiser for the
Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP). No
orienteering experience is required, just plenty of energy and a
great team spirit.
"With just 6,600 Sumatran orangutans left in the wild, the race
to save these extraordinary animals has never been more urgent,"
says Auckland Zoo Primate team leader, Amy Robbins, who has worked
with SOCP helping to rehabilitate rescued orangutans and release
them into Sumatra's Bukit Tigapuluh National Park.
Mrs Robbins says orangutans are known as the 'gardeners of the
forest' because of the vital ecological role they play as seed
dispersers of hundreds of tree and plant species. But in both
Sumatra and Borneo where they live, their forests are being logged
and burned to plant oil palms, an action that is also fuelling
climate change.
"In Indonesia, 3,400km2 of rainforest and peat swamp
forest is being converted into oil palm plantations every year. In
Kiwi-speak that's 54 rugby fields an hour! Next week we'll
celebrate the sixth birthday of our youngest orangutan, Madju
(whose Indonesian name means "to make progress"). It's devastating
to think that in his six short years of life, forest area
equivalent to over 52,500 rugby fields has been destroyed."
It is predicted that if this deforestation trend continues, the
orangutan, Sumatran tiger, Asian elephant and Asian rhino could all
be extinct in the wild by 2022.
"As individual consumers, it is in our power to help protect
these animals and habitats and slow the uncontrolled expansion of
the palm oil industry," says Mrs Robbins. "We can reduce our palm
oil consumption and choose to buy palm-oil free products. With palm
oil an ingredient in at least one in every 10 supermarket products,
many of us taking such action can make a real difference. This
Orangutan Caring Week we invite everyone to check out our online Buy Palm Oil Free shopping
guide and use it when doing the weekly shop. See if your
favourite foods are palm oil-free. If they're not, you might
discover alternatives," says Mrs Robbins.
Zoo director Jonathan Wilcken says along with supporting
wildlife conservation projects in Sumatra, Auckland Zoo is
committed to avoiding or minimising the use or sale of products
that contain palm oil.
"Our ultimate goal is to be palm oil-free, and that's a journey.
We would love all New Zealanders to join us on this journey, so
that together we can ensure that New Zealand does not help create a
future without these magnificent great apes," says Mr Wilcken.
Event details
- Orangutan Caring Week 2011 is being celebrated internationally
from 12 to 20 November
- 'Hang like an
orangutan', Saturday 12 November to Sunday 13
November, 10am - 3pm. Normal Zoo admission prices apply. All
activities will be a gold coin donation in addition to normal Zoo
admission, and free for Friends of the Zoo. Our thanks to
supporters Hell Pizza, Lush, Proper Crisps and
Whittaker's
-
The Great Ape
Race, Thursday 17 November, 5.30pm - 9pm. Cost: $25
for adults, $10 for children (aged 4 - 14) and $60 for a family (2
adults, 2 children). Includes Zoo admission. Pre-registration
required. To register visit here
or phone (09) 360 3805. This event is raising funds for the
Auckland Zoo Conservation Fund to support the work of the Sumatran
Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP) and is being run with the
Zoo's friends, Lactic Turkey Events and Auckland Orienteering Club.
Our thanks to supporters Frucor, Rebel Sport and Whittaker's
Orangutan Fast Facts
- The orangutan is the largest tree-dwelling animal on Earth. The
only great ape from Asia, its home range is restricted to the
islands of Borneo and Sumatra in Indonesia
- The Bornean orangutan is listed as Endangered and the Sumatran
orangutan as Critically Endangered (IUCN Red List - www.iucnredlist.org )
- The biggest threat to the survival of the orangutan is
deforestation of its habitat (primarily to make way for oil palm
plantations, and logging by the paper industry). Visit here for more information about
palm oil
- The genetic make-up of the orangutan is 97.4% similar to
humans
- Orangutans are arboreal, meaning they spend almost their entire
life in the trees. They have adapted to this lifestyle with
their long and strong forearms and flexible shoulder joints.
Orangutans' arms are twice the length of their legs. Males have a
2m armspan
-
In Borneo, the orangutan gives birth just once every eight
years. In Sumatra, some females give birth only once every 10
years, and females do not breed until they are 17 years old
Palm oil Fast Facts
- Palm oil comes from the oil palm plant, native to West Africa.
It was introduced to Indonesia and Malaysia in the early 1900s.
Today these two countries produce more than 85% of the world's palm
oil
- Indonesia alone, converts 3,400km2
(340,000 ha) of forest into oil palm annually - that's 54
rugby fields every hour.
- Nearly half of Sumatra's forests disappeared between 1985 and
2007. In the last decade, close to 80% of deforestation in the
Sumatran peatlands (an area that provides key orangutan habitat and
vital carbon stores) was driven by the expansion of oil palm
plantations. (September 2011 UNEP - 'Orangutans and the economics
of sustainable forest management in Sumatra' http://www.unep.org/pdf/orangutan_report_scr.pdf)
- Palm oil is used in one in every 10 supermarket products,
including food, cosmetics, cleaning and bath products. The palm
kernel is also used to make animal feed
- For Auckland Zoo's Buy Palm Oil Free Shopping Guide, visit here.