Villagers living on the Indonesian side of Borneo killed at least 750 endangered orangutans in a year, some to protect crops from being raided and others for their meat, a new survey shows.
Such practices, never before quantified, are now believed to be a more serious threat to the existence of the red apes than previously thought, Erik Meijaard, the main author of the report that appeared in the journal PLoSOne, said Monday.
Indonesia — home to 90 percent of the orangutans left in the wild — was blanketed with plush rain forests less than 50 years ago, but half those trees have since been cleared in the rush to supply the world with timber, pulp, paper and more recently, palm oil.
As a result, most of the remaining 50,000 to 60,000 apes live in scattered, degraded forests, putting them in frequent, and often deadly, conflict with humans.
"But our surveys also indicate that killing of orangutans is happening deep inside forested areas, where orangutans are hunted just like any other species," Meijaard said. "This may be an uncomfortable truth, but not one that we can any longer ignore."
The Nature Conservancy and 19 other private organizations, including the WWF and the Association of Indonesian Primate Experts and Observers, carried out the survey to get a better understanding of orangutan killings and their underlying causes.
They interviewed 6,983 people in 687 villages in three provinces of Kalimantan — the Indonesian side of Borneo, which is shared also with Malaysia and Brunei — between April 2008 and September 2009.
Figures from the interviews were extrapolated to the target population of men 15 years and older, since only 11 women reported killing orangutans. This indicated that at least 750 apes had been killed during the previous year.
Neil Makinuddin, program manager of The Nature Conservancy, said they were surprised how many respondents reported killing and then eating orangutans — just over half.
Some were consumed after being killed for entering crops or because people were afraid of the animals, the study showed. Others were hunted outright for their meat.
The authors were quick to stress, however, that the people who admitted to killing orangutans said they'd only done so once or twice over the course of their lives.
"Orangutans are not part of people's day-to-day diet," said Meijaard, a senior adviser for the People and Nature Consulting International.
Indonesian Forestry Ministry spokesman Ahmad Fauzi Masyhud said his office has not yet received the report, which he described as "bombastic."
"We have to recheck whether it is true or not," he said. "But frankly I doubt it."
But Meijaard said it's time to face up to the facts.
"We used robust scientific methods to assess the social dimensions of orangutan conservation," he said. "Unless we assume that most of the survey respondents lied, we have to accept the hunting issue as an uncomfortable truth that needs to be addressed if we want to save the orangutan."
He said he's seen far too many orangutan skulls, skins and chopped off hands, and heard too many firsthand accounts of people having killed or eaten orangutans, to believe it isn't happenin
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Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Indonesians killed 750 orangutans in year
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Is there life after Facebook?: The Cyber Gulag revisited & Debate reloaded
International institute Ifimes :Is there life after Facebook?
By Anis H. Bajrektarević
Is there life after Facebook? Or after the Spring-ing ‘revolution’? Now, when Wall Street is occupied, how will we occupy ourselves? Could we google protest, tweet discontent, upload promenades, block a tragedy and avoid farce, and eventually download pure happiness – happily ever after? ...
Through the pain of sobriety, the protesters all across the MENA, Euro-Med and overseas are learning that neither globalization nor the McFB(1) way of life (mostly spent in the large, air-conditioned shopping-malls) is a shortcut to development; that free trade is not a virtue, but an instrument; that liberalism is not a state of mind but a well-doctrinated ideology, and finally that the social media networks are only a communication tool, not a replacement for indepen- dent critical thinking(2) or for the collapsed cross-generational contract. “We are the suckers, the eternally expectant ones, the hopeful ones– and the eternally disappointed ones(3)...”
Machines run on binary-coded algorithms (predictability of human behavior cyber-providers) can neither compensate for an empathic human touch nor can they replace the wonders of socio-emotional interactions of individuals in a real time-space(4). Sociableness is neither of a linear, one-directional dynamics à la the Running Sushi, nor can it be simplifiable and instant portable like the three-size Starbucks coffee. Personal relations are lived, not utilized by the mouse click. Human integrity is self-molested (brutalized) and self-reduced (trivialized) into the lame shop-window commodity which is purchasable 24/7 by ‘poking’ on the photo of someone’s personal profile. And, likies are available to give a rating for ‘commodities’.
Saturday, November 12, 2011
he Philippines' Puerto Princesa Underground River
World's new seven wonders of nature
The Amazon rainforest, Vietnam's Halong Bay and Argentina's Iguazu Falls were named among the world's new seven wonders of nature, according to organizers of a global poll. The other four crowned are South Korea's Jeju Island, Indonesia's Komodo, the Philippines' Puerto Princesa Underground River and South Africa's Table Mountain.
Australia to become first country to introduce unbranded cigarette packets
Australia to become first country to introduce unbranded cigarette packets
Cigarettes to be sold in the same olive green packs
Health warnings will cover 75% of packs' frontAustralia is to become the first nation to ban logos and other advertising on cigarette packs to make smoking less appealing.
The new laws means tobacco companies wont be able to display their distinctive colours, brand designs and logos on the packets.
Instead cigarettes will all be sold in the same olive green packs with brand names dwarfed by often gruesome, full-colour health warnings covering 75 per cent of the packs' front.
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Australia is to become the first nation to ban logos and other advertising on cigarette packs to make smoking less appealing
Graphic health warnings currently cover only 30 per cent.
The government has vowed to fight tobacco companies over the legislation change, which comes into force from December next year, in court.
Friday, November 11, 2011
As of Nov 22, Gmail app for BlackBerry will stop
Do you use Gmail? Do you use a BlackBerry? Do you check your Gmail on it?
Google has offered a free app that BlackBerry users can download to read their Gmail on the go, but it has now announced that as of Nov. 22, it will stop. No more downloads, no more technical support if you already have the app. The app will still work if you have it (go to http://m.google.com/mail on your handheld if you still want to get it), but Google says it would prefer you just use the browser on your handheld instead. (Just go to http://www.gmail.com. It’s slow but it works.)
Google’s explanation: “Over this past year, we’ve focused efforts on building a great Gmail experience in the mobile browser and will continue investing in this area.”
On Wednesday a week ago, Google released an app for Apple devices — and pulled it within a few hours. It ran an apology on Twitter: “The iOS app we launched today contained a bug with notifications. We have pulled the app to fix the problem. Sorry we messed up.”
The app for RIM’s BlackBerry devices has not had such problems — but RIM has had its share as it tries to compete with smartphones that use Google’s Android software or Apple’s iOS operating system.
While Google and RIM have played down the decision, Ed Hansberry of Information Week wrote, “When one of the largest email providers in the world drops support for a platform and suggests users wait for a mobile Web page to be developed, it isn’t good.”
Alkesh Shah, an analyst at Evercore Partners in New York who follows RIM, has said, “They made great phones that focus around email, but not around the Internet. And that’s where Apple and Android are way ahead of them.”
