A Quest to Save the Orangutan
Birute Mary Galdikas has devoted her life to saving the great ape. But the orangutan faces its greatest threat yet
- By Bill Brubaker
- Photographs by Anup Shah and Fiona Rogers
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Palm oil companies don't see themselves as the bad guys, of course. Singapore-based Wilmar International Ltd., one of the world's largest producers, says it is "committed to ensuring the conservation of rare, threatened and endangered species." The companies point out that they provide employment for millions of people in the developing world (the oil palm tree is also grown in Africa and South America), while producing a shelf-stable cooking oil free of trans fats. As fuel, palm oil does not contribute as much greenhouse gas to the atmosphere as fossil fuels, although there is a furious debate over whether the carbon dioxide absorbed by the palm trees makes up for the greenhouse gases dispersed into the atmosphere when rain forests are burned and plowed to create plantations.
Nowhere is the clash between planters and conservationists more important than in Borneo, an island divided into Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei. Its rain forests are among the most ecologically diverse in the world, with about 15,000 types of plants, more than 600 species of birds and an animal population that also includes the clouded leopard and pygmy elephant. "Camp Leakey still looks like a primeval Eden," Galdikas says. "It's magical." Her camp is in Tanjung Puting National Park, a one-million-acre reserve managed by the Indonesian government with help from her Orangutan Foundation International (OFI). But the habitat is not fully protected. "If you go eight kilometers north [of the camp], you come into massive palm oil plantations," she says. "They go on forever, hundreds of kilometers."
So far, in a bid to outmaneuver oil palm growers, Galdikas' OFI has purchased several hundred acres of peat swamp forest and partnered with a Dayak village to manage 1,000 more. And during my five days in Kalimantan, she promises to show me the fruits of her work not only as a scientist and conservationist but as a swampland investor as well. Having grown up in Miami, I can't help but think of the old line, "If you believe that, I've got some swampland in Florida to sell you," implying the stuff is utterly worthless. In Borneo, I learn, swampland is coveted.
Biruté Mary Galdikas wasn't looking to become a real estate magnate when she arrived on the island four decades ago to study orangutans. She had earned a master's degree in anthropology at UCLA (a PhD would follow). Her research in Borneo was encouraged by legendary paleoanthropologist Louis Leakey, whose excavations with his wife, Mary, in East Africa unearthed some of the most important fossils and stone tools of our hominid ancestors. (Leakey also mentored chimp researcher Jane Goodall and gorilla researcher Dian Fossey; he called them the "trimates.")
The Borneo that greeted Galdikas and her then-husband, photographer Rod Brindamour, was one of the most isolated and mysterious places on earth, an island where headhunting was part of the collective memory of local tribes.
To locals, Galdikas was very much an oddity herself. "I started crying the first time I saw Biruté because she looked so strange. She was the first Westerner I'd ever seen!" says Cecep, Camp Leakey's information officer, who was a boy of 3 when he first glimpsed Galdikas 32 years ago. Cecep, who, like many Indonesians, goes by a single name, says he stopped crying only after his mother assured him she was not a hunter: "She's come here to help us."
The daughter of Lithuanians who met as refugees in Germany and immigrated first to Canada, then the United States, Galdikas has paid dearly for the life she has chosen. She has endured death threats, near-fatal illnesses and bone-chilling encounters with wild animals. She and Brindamour separated in 1979, and their son, Binti, joined his father in Canada when he was 3 years old. Both parents had worried that Binti was not being properly socialized in Borneo because his best friends were, well, orangutans. Galdikas married a Dayak chief named Pak Bohap and they had two children, Jane and Fred, who spent little time in Indonesia once they were teenagers. "So this hasn't been easy," she says.
Still, she doesn't seem to have many regrets. "To me, a lot of my experiences with orangutans have the overtones of epiphanies, almost religious experiences," she says with a far-off gaze. "Certainly when you are in the forest by yourself it's like being in a parallel universe that most people don't experience."
Orangutans live wild only on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. The two populations have been isolated for more than a million years and are considered separate species; the Bornean orangutans are slightly larger than the Sumatran variety. Precious little was known about orangutan biology before Galdikas started studying it. She has discovered that the tree-dwelling animals spend as much as half the day on the ground. Adult males can reach five feet tall (though they rarely stand erect) and weigh up to 300 pounds. "They're massive," says Galdikas. "That's what you notice more than height." Females weigh about half as much and are four feet tall. Both sexes can live 30 to 50 years. At night they sleep in nests of sticks they build high in the treetops.
Galdikas also has documented that the orangs of Tanjung Puting National Park procreate about once every eight years, the longest birth interval of any wild mammal. "One of the reasons orangutans are so vulnerable is because they are not rabbits that can have a few litters every year," she says. After an eight-month pregnancy, females bear a single infant, which will remain with its mother for eight or nine years.
Galdikas has cataloged about 400 types of fruit, flowers, bark, leaves and insects that wild orangutans eat. They even like termites. Males usually search for food alone, while females bring along one or two of their offspring. Orangs have a keen sense of where the good stuff can be found. "I was in the forest once, following a wild orangutan female, and I knew we were about two kilometers from a durian tree that was fruiting," Galdikas says on the front porch of her bungalow at Camp Leakey. "Right there, I was able to predict that she was heading for that tree. And she traveled in a straight line, not meandering at all until she reached the tree."
Males are frighteningly unpredictable. Galdikas recalls one who picked up her front porch bench and hurled it like a missile. "It's not that they're malicious," Galdikas assures me, gesturing toward the old bench. "It's just that their testosterone surge will explode and they can be very dangerous, inadvertently." She adds, perhaps as a warning that I shouldn't get too chummy with Tom and Kusasi, "if that bench had hit somebody on the head, that person would have been maimed for life."
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Comments (10)
I love Orangutans and it makes me very sad to see that they are sliping away from this earth. I give lots of credit to Birute Galdikas for trying to save these amazing creaters I wish I could help.
Posted by Keenan on April 26,2012 | 01:40 PM
SAVE THE RAINFORESTS WE NEED TO STOP KILLING ANIMALS AND CUTTING DOWN TREES REDUCE REUSE AND RECYCLE THATS WHATS THE MATTER WITH THIS GENERATION THEY DONT CARE AND THEY R WASTEFUL..>.:(
Posted by MARY LEE on March 6,2011 | 11:40 AM
Thank you, Smithsonian, for drawing much needed attention to the plight of orangutans and to the work of Biruté Mary Galdikas. Having spent most of the past 2 years in Indonesia, I've witnessed firsthand the widespread destruction of tropical rain forests that is occurring in this country. As Brubaker's article made clear, the outlook for wild orangutan populations is bleak and the obstacles facing Galdikas and her organization, Orangutan Foundation International (OFI), are immense. The fact that Galdikas, after 40 years already, continues to fight passionately for the survival of orangutans gives us a reason to hope. Up against the wealth and greed of multinational palm oil companies, among other opponents, Galdikas' perseverance and dedication to the conservation of orangutans and their habitats is truly an inspiration.
I've spent the last 7 months working as an intern for OFI, spending day-in and day-out right beside Galdikas. I've lived in her house in Vancouver and Kalimantan, literally spending 24-hours a day in her vicinity. In my experience, Galdikas is professional, pleasant, good-humored and benevolent. I am constantly impressed by her enormous energy and the amount of time and dedication that she puts into her work. I am also often struck by just how balanced she is in her family and emotional life. Although she does extraordinary work and has accomplished countless extraordinary feats of conservation, she is actually a humble, modest person, with a dry wit that keeps me laughing.
Posted by Alison Ashbury on February 9,2011 | 09:03 AM
In reply to James McKellen's angry and misleading comments about my work, I want to set the record straight. I am very familiar with what other writers have written about Galdikas, including Spalding's book, published under different titles in Canada and the U.S. I read both versions of Spalding's book, plus her original article in Outside magazine, plus the statement of claim in the libel law suit of Galdikas against Spalding for the magazine article. The point of Spalding's book is that Galdikas would not agree to interviews with Spalding and Spalding does not include a response from Galdikas to Spalding's criticisms. I also interviewed people who know Galdikas well and who have not been interviewed before, including her ex-husband Rod Brindamour, her Dayak husband Bohop (at the home they share in Pasir Pajang) and a host of past colleagues. So, the simple fact remains that my interviews with Galdikas and the people who knew her are more extensive, as anyone who takes the time to read my book will see. Spalding chose to write a book simply bashing Galdikas and did not recognize that while Galdikas may have some flaws as a human being, her life's work is remarkable and deserves some appreciation.
Posted by Shawn Thompson on December 30,2010 | 05:17 PM
"Among other things, the book includes the most extensive interviews done with Galdikas."
Mr. Thompson, you clearly haven't read "A Dark Place in the Jungle" by Linda Spalding, or "Among the Orangutans: The Birute Galdikas Story" by Evelyn Gallardo, both of which feature extensive interviews with Galdikas -- substantially more extensive than your own; particularly the latter, an entire book based on interviews! So much for ten years of research.
Posted by James McKellen on December 5,2010 | 11:10 AM
What is the connection between Palm Oil and Orangutans?
This is a fantastic speech at TED by Willie Smits who has a very interesting approach to saving Orangutans.
http://www.ted.com/talks/willie_smits_restores_a_rainforest.html
Posted by John Bates on December 1,2010 | 05:25 PM
I found the article fascinating and I fully support the lifelong work Birute Galdikas and others have devoted to these amazing creatures. However, I found the numerical disparities between the two species (Bornean, featured in the article and Sumatran) incredibly disconcerting. While Galdikas' work certainly deserves praise and an exhibition of her work is laudible, why was there such little attention paid to the depressingly low and rapidly dwindling numbers of the Sumtran orangutans? One sentence half way through the article glanced over the numbers; around 48,000 for Bornean and around 6,000 for Sumatran. That is quite a vast difference!
I feel it would be very worthwhile for the Smithsonian to also do an article on the Sumatran orangutans and their researchers. While their habitat destruction occurs for the same reasons (oil palm plantations and logging), their numbers are much fewer and their situation is currently far more dire. Additionally, in the same forests as the orangutans, exists Sumatran tigers (less the 300 in known existence), forest elephants and pygmy hippos. If work, to include advertising in the way of magazine articles and publicity is done effectively, than numerous unique species may be saved from extinction.
And yes, adopt an orangutan today!
Posted by Shenoa Herlinger on November 29,2010 | 09:39 AM
Gunung Palung Orangutan Conservation Program (GPOCP) is working to protect endangered wild orangutans living in and around Gunung Palung National Park in Indonesian Borneo from threats posed by human activities. GPOCP encourages environmental stewardship within villages bordering the national park through community education, advocacy and outreach programs, and helps strengthen institutions responsible for enforcing poaching and habitat protection laws.
Visit GPOCP's website to learn more about their ongoing programs--and ways you can help save the endangered orangutan!
Gunung Palung Orangutan Conservation Program
www.saveGPorangutans.org
Posted by Hollis Burbank-Hammarlund, U.S. Administrative Director on November 28,2010 | 09:08 AM
Orangutans are critically endangered in the wild because of rapid deforestation and the expansion of palm oil plantations into their habitat. If nothing is done to protect them, they will be extinct in just a few years.
Visit the Orangutan Outreach website to learn how YOU can make a difference!
Orangutan Outreach
www.redapes.org
Reach out and save the orangutans!
Adopt an orangutan today!
Posted by Dr Zaius on November 23,2010 | 10:58 PM
Ah, yes, memories of the orangutans Kusasi, Princess and the others. I once sat down in a jungle path at Camp Leakey with Birute Galdikas to commune with Princess, who was taught sign language by my friend Gary Shapiro, who co-founded the Orangutan Foundation International with Galdikas and now has his own orangutan foundation.
Don't forget ro mention my comprehensive book on orangutans with plenty of material on Birute Galdikas, the woman behind the myth. The book is called The Intimate Ape: Orangutans and the Secret Life of a Vanishing Species, published last March in the U.S. after 10 years work. Among other things, the book includes the most extensive interviews done with Galdikas.
Readers interested more in orangutans can check put my online column for Psychology Today magazine called The Intimate Ape, in the animal behavior section. Some day maybe the column could be moved to the people section, but we aren't there yet.
Posted by Shawn Thompson on November 18,2010 | 01:52 PM