Join Zoo in race to save orangutan
5 November 2012
Join Zoo in race to save orangutan
The Great Ape Race – a mini ‘amazing race’ around Auckland Zoo to raise funds to help conserve orangutan in the wild, takes place on Thursday 15 November (6pm-9pm) as part of Orangutan Caring Week celebrations.
“The world is in a race to save this unique and magnificent great ape from extinction. The race is a fun and powerful way for Kiwis to help and show they care,” says the Zoo’s primate team leader, Amy Robbins.
Auckland Zoo has teamed up with Lactic Turkey Events to hold the early evening navigational race that is open to adults and children. Plenty of energy and teamwork are the only requirements, and participants are in to win great prizes. All profits from the event will go to the Auckland Zoo Conservation Fund in support of the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme’s (SOCP) work – rescuing, rehabilitating and releasing orangutans and protecting habitat.
Other activities on daily at the Zoo during Orangutan Caring Week (10-18 November) include orangutan encounters at 12.30pm, story time and orangutan nest making at 10am, plus craft and other interactive activities and displays.
Celebrated annually around the world, Orangutan Caring Week has taken the theme ‘Safeguarding habitat for a secure future’ for 2012.
Illegal logging and the burning of rainforests and peat swamp forests to plant oil palm plantations in Borneo and Sumatra remains the biggest threat to the orangutan, which could be extinct in the wild by 2022 if current trends continue.
As wildlife advocates, Auckland Zoo believes the only way to save these species and habitat and slow the uncontrolled and unsustainable expansion of the palm oil industry is to reduce palm oil consumption, and therefore demand.
“Palm oil itself isn’t bad. The problem is the destruction of rainforest habitat and consequent loss of orangutans and many other rainforest species to produce it – despite deforested land being readily available to use,” says Ms Robbins.
“Taking part in The Great Ape Race to support the vital work of SOCP and, as much as you can, choosing to buy local and unprocessed foods and products that are palm oil-free are great ways to help. The Zoo has an online Palm Oil-Free Shopping Guide, containing hundreds of supermarket products to help you shop, that will also soon be available as a smartphone app,” she says.
Event details
• Orangutan Caring Week
2012 is being celebrated at Auckland Zoo from 10-18 November
with a range of daily activities. Normal Zoo admission
prices apply.
• The Great Ape Race, Thursday 15
November, 6pm-9pm. Cost: $25 for adults, $10 for children
and $60 for a family (2 adults and 2 children or 1 adult and
3 children) – includes Zoo admission. Pre-registration
required. To register and for full details, visit www.aucklandzoo.co.nz or phone (09) 360
3805. This event is to raise funds for the Auckland Zoo
Conservation Fund to support the Sumatran Orangutan
Conservation Programme. Refreshments and palm oil-free food
will be available for purchase
Fast
Facts
• The orangutan is the largest tree-dwelling
animal on Earth. 97.4% genetically similar to humans, it is
the only great ape from Asia. Its home range is restricted
to the islands of Borneo and Sumatra.
• The biggest
threat to the survival of the orangutan is illegal
deforestation of its rainforest habitat, primarily to make
way for oil palm plantations and logging by the paper
industry, as well as the illegal pet trade.
• Indonesia
alone converts 3,400km2 (340,000 ha) of forest annually –
that’s 54 rugby fields every hour. At this current rate
of deforestation, the Sumatran orangutan could be extinct in
the wild as early as 2015.
• In northern Sumatra’s
officially protected Leuser Ecosystem, including Tripa peat
swamp forest (home to the world’s highest density of
orangutans), illegal logging and fires have decimated 90% of
the population, which has plummeted from 2000 in 1990 to an
estimated 200 today. The Sumatran Orangutan Conservation
Programme (SOCP) warns that if deforesting of this area does
not stop now, this local population could all be gone by
2013.
• SOCP is working hard to ensure this great
ape’s future. View an 18 October NBC interview with SOCP
director, Ian Singleton, in northern Sumatra here.
• Palm
oil is the world’s most widely produced vegetable oil, and
is in at least one in 10 supermarket products, including
food, cosmetic, bath and cleaning products. 90% of its
production comes from Indonesia and Malaysia
• In New
Zealand, there’s currently no legal requirement to label
palm oil or its derivatives, making it difficult to know
whether or not you are consuming it. Use Auckland Zoo’s
online Palm Oil-Free Shopping Guide, soon to be available as
an app. Visit www.aucklandzoo.co.nz
About
Auckland Zoo
Auckland Zoo is operated by Regional
Facilities Auckland (RFA), a council-controlled organisation
of Auckland Council. It is home to the largest collection of
native and exotic wildlife species in New Zealand (over 860
animals and 138 species) and attracts over half a million
visitors annually. It is becoming increasingly well-known
nationally, and internationally through the award-winning
television programme, The Zoo. At the heart of all Auckland
Zoo's work and activities is its mission: "to bring people
together to build a future for wildlife”. Auckland Zoo is
a member of both the Zoo and Aquarium Association
(Australasia) and the World Association of Zoos and
Aquariums.
ENDS