Donate

The Orangutan Conservancy is dedicated to the conservation of orangutans and their habitat. We need your help to support the various projects globally. Click here to donate.

Projects

Projects
Gunung Palung
Nyaru Menteng
Mawas
SOCP

Contact Us!

Questions, comments? Please contact by clicking here.

Email Alerts

Subscribe here to register automatically for Orangutan Conservancy e-mail alerts*






Categories

Archives


*Your email is strictly private and will not be given out or sold to anyone for any reason.

Search


Orangutan Crisis Coalition

With wild orangutans and their rainforest homes disappearing faster than ever, the Orangutan Conservancy (OC) recently launched the Orangutan Crisis Coalition (OCC)

Read More...

How You Can Help

How You Can Help
Make a Donation
Cell Phones
Adoption
Gift Card
Other Ways


Entry Calendar

July 2009
M T W T F S S
« May    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Recent posts

Recent comments

Primate Declines Put Forest Ecosystems at Risk

WASHINGTON, DC — Monkeys and apes play a crucial role in dispersing the seeds of fruit trees in tropical forests. But across the tropics, habitat loss and hunting are decimating local primate populations, and may be putting many tree species at risk.

How a plant spreads its seeds – and how far – are key to its survival. Some species rely on wind or water to disperse their seeds, but for trees in the tropics, animals often play a critical role. Primates in particular are one of the most important seed dispersers in tropical forests.

Kathryn Stoner is a research ecologist at the National University of Mexico. She has been studying how certain monkeys contribute to seed dispersal in a tropical forest in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas.

“They’ll eat a fruit,” says Stoner, “then they move. They can move up to kilometers sometimes, seven or eight hours later before they actually defecate the seed.” Wherever the seed falls, it will germinate and grow to an adult tree.

Stoner notes that some species of primates may actually help degraded areas of forest to re-grow, by dispersing seeds as they move between forest fragments.

The role of primates as seed dispersers has been observed throughout the tropics: in Latin America, in Asia and in Africa.

For the past 17 years, anthropologist Joanna Lambert has been studying seed dispersal in Uganda’s Kibale National Park, which is known for its unusual abundance of primates. In a presentation sponsored by the National Science Foundation, she described the results of her research:

“What I’ve found is that depending on the species of tree and the fruit that’s being consumed,” Lambert said, “primates are responsible for 78-92% of the removal of the seeds, relative to […] the major fruit-eating birds.” Lambert adds that on average, the monkeys and chimpanzees of Kibale move 34,000 seeds in a square kilometer in a day.

And many of those seeds grow into trees used by local people for fruit or for medicinal purposes. According to Lambert, 42% of the fruit species dispersed by primates in Kibale have resources that are used by people.

But according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, close to one third of the world’s primate species are in danger of extinction.

In Asia and Latin America, tropical forest clearing for human settlement, agriculture, and commercial logging are destroying primate habitat.

Hunting is also taking a huge toll on primate populations, as logging operations open up new roads through previously inaccessible areas of forest, and rural subsistence hunters exchange their traditional weapons – bows and arrows, wooden traps, and blowpipes – for guns.

In Western and Central Africa, hunting is largely being driven by demand from urban markets. Known as “the bushmeat trade,” the commercial hunting of primates and other wild game species has eliminated all the large mammals from some areas of forest.

Joanna Lambert says that the direct consequences are obvious: “The direct consequences of a bushmeat trade or a bushmeat crisis are the loss of species, the loss of actual animals in a forest.”
But, Lambert explains, for people with no other way to earn a living, bushmeat hunting may seem like their only option.

Both she and Kathryn Stoner emphasize that hunting and habitat loss will affect more than just primate populations. “We’re actually in the very beginning stages of what we may see as a very large change in composition and structure of tropical forests,” Stoner warns, “as a consequence of elimination or reduction of primate populations.”

The process may be already underway. As primate populations decline, preliminary studies have found effects in tree seedlings, including a different mix of species and less genetic diversity.

(Source: Voice of America)

39 Comments »

  1. Thanks so very much for taking your time to create this very useful and informative site. I have learned a lot from your site. Thanks!!u

    Comment by Timmy — August 3, 2008 @ 4:01 am

  2. I\’m love this great website. Many thanks guyi

    Comment by Willem — August 3, 2008 @ 9:13 am

  3. Great site. I will bookmark for my sons to view as well!!!

    Comment by Rosina — August 5, 2008 @ 1:03 pm

  4. You guys do a wonderful job! Keep up the good work!!!

    Comment by john — August 5, 2008 @ 10:19 pm

  5. Cool!.. Nice work…

    Comment by Siber — August 5, 2008 @ 10:22 pm

  6. Thanks for your project. I like this site. KEEP IT UP..I

    Comment by Kathy — August 8, 2008 @ 3:57 pm

  7. Very cool design! Useful information. Go on!o

    Comment by jammarlibre — August 16, 2008 @ 10:36 pm

  8. Fascinating site and well worth the visit. I will be backe

    Comment by Rosina — August 17, 2008 @ 2:39 am

  9. Great content. I’ll keep coming back for similar posts which I cannot wait to read….

    Comment by Work at homes moms — August 22, 2008 @ 1:29 pm

  10. You have built a good website

    Comment by Timmy — August 23, 2008 @ 4:02 am

  11. Great site. I will bookmark for my sons to view as well!!!

    Comment by jammarlibre — August 24, 2008 @ 2:24 am

  12. Wonderful and informative web site.I used information from that site its great.l

    Comment by Ron — August 24, 2008 @ 10:51 pm

  13. Thank you for your site. I have found here much useful information…h

    Comment by Melissa — August 29, 2008 @ 8:38 am

  14. yo…

    great…

    Trackback by hotnetsoft ddl — August 30, 2008 @ 5:57 am

  15. I enjoyed your page. Keep up the good work! Feel free to visit my page. It\’s cool too.o

    Comment by Albert — August 30, 2008 @ 5:03 pm

  16. i love this site.r

    Comment by john — August 31, 2008 @ 1:46 am

  17. Thanks so very much for taking your time to create this very useful and informative site. I have learned a lot from your site. Thanks!!

    Comment by Kathy — August 31, 2008 @ 2:24 am

  18. Nice post. I\’ll return.

    Comment by jammarlibre — September 1, 2008 @ 3:42 pm

  19. i love this site.d

    Comment by judy — September 3, 2008 @ 9:02 am

  20. Excellent site, added to favorites!!o

    Comment by jammarlibre — September 5, 2008 @ 1:50 am

  21. I\’l be back… :)h

    Comment by Siber — September 30, 2008 @ 9:09 am

  22. Found your site in google, and it has a lot of usefull information. Thanx.>

    Comment by lhuv — October 2, 2008 @ 5:41 pm

  23. I\’l be back… :)

    Comment by Albert — October 13, 2008 @ 12:02 am

  24. Nice blog, I love to see this kind of content, keep up the good work.

    Comment by Hillary Martin — October 20, 2008 @ 9:00 pm

  25. Nice site! Big thanx to webmaster!m

    Comment by Timmy — October 22, 2008 @ 1:45 am

  26. Thanks so very much for taking your time to create this very useful and informative site. I have learned a lot from your site. Thanks!!k

    Comment by john — October 22, 2008 @ 4:34 am

  27. I browse and saw you website and I found it very interesting.Thank you for the good work, greetings

    Comment by Robert — October 22, 2008 @ 4:34 am

  28. You guys do a wonderful job! Keep up the good work!!!

    Comment by Willem — October 29, 2008 @ 10:21 am

  29. looking forward for more information about this. thanks for sharing. Eugene

    Comment by Eugene — October 30, 2008 @ 1:39 pm

  30. Hi, good morning to all of you… Nice Guestbook ;-) !!!f

    Comment by Siber — November 4, 2008 @ 10:42 pm

  31. Great Site - really useful information!t

    Comment by Rosina — November 6, 2008 @ 5:18 pm

  32. Very interesting website. Keep up the outstanding work and thank you…j

    Comment by Rosina — November 9, 2008 @ 1:25 am

  33. Hi, all. Nice site…I really like your site ! Good job man.

    Comment by Melissa — November 10, 2008 @ 5:34 am

  34. Great site. I will bookmark for my sons to view as well!!!n

    Comment by judy — November 13, 2008 @ 11:40 pm

  35. Thank for making this valuable information available to the public.

    Comment by lhuv — November 15, 2008 @ 7:20 pm

  36. i love this site.

    Comment by judy — November 28, 2008 @ 8:31 am

  37. Wonderful and informative web site.I used information from that site its great.n

    Comment by Ron — December 1, 2008 @ 11:56 pm

  38. This site is really superb!!! Thank you for you work! Good Luck

    Comment by Timmy — December 21, 2008 @ 11:01 am

  39. Hi, cool site, good writing ;)

    Comment by cypehynchet — February 9, 2009 @ 5:12 am

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment