| Literature DB >> 21364732 |
Gail Campbell-Smith1, Miran Campbell-Smith, Ian Singleton, Matthew Linkie.
Abstract
Deforestation rates in Sumatra are amongst the highest in the tropics. Lowland forests, which support the highest densities of orangutans, are particularly vulnerable to clearance and fragmentation because they are highly accessible. Consequently, many orangutans will, in the future, live in strictly or partially isolated populations. Whilst orangutans have been extensively studied in primary forests, their response to living in human-dominated landscapes remains poorly known, despite it being essential for their future management. Here, we focus on an isolated group of critically endangered Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii) that co-exist with farmers in a mixed agroforest system consisting of degraded natural forest, smallholder (predominantly rubber) farms and oil palm plantations. Over 24 months we conducted the first ever spatial assessment of orangutan habitat use in the human-transformed landscape of Batang Serangan, North Sumatra. From 1,204 independent crop-raiding incidents recorded, orangutans showed strong foraging preference for mixed farmland/degraded forest habitat over oil palm patches. The core home range areas of the eight adult orangutans encompassed only 14% of the available study area. Monthly home range sizes averaged 423 ha (±139, SD) for males, and 131 ± 46 ha for females, and were positively influenced by wild and cultivated fruit presence, and by crop consumption. The average daily distance travelled was similar for both adult males (868 m ± 350, SD) and females (866 m ± 195), but increased when orangutans raided crops. These findings show that orangutans can survive, demographically, in certain types of degraded landscapes, foraging on a mixture of crops and wild fruits. However, the poor quality habitat offered to orangutans by oil palm plantations, in terms of low food availability and as a barrier to female movements, is cause for concern since this is the land use type that is most rapidly replacing the preferred forest habitat across both Sumatran and Bornean orangutan ranges.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21364732 PMCID: PMC3040220 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0017210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Orangutan home range patterns for (a) five adult females (2936 data points) and (b) three adult males (2034 data points) in Batang Serangan, North Sumatra.
Best logistic regression models explaining the relationship between habitat use and the presence or absence of crop-raiding by orangutans.
| Model | 2log likelihood | K | ΔAIC | w |
| 1.1. Habitat type + elevation | 68.64 | 3 | 0.00 | 0.692 |
| 1.2. Habitat type + elevation + distance to nearest village | 68.46 | 4 | 1.82 | 0.279 |
| 1.3. Habitat type | 77.88 | 2 | 7.24 | 0.019 |
| 1.4. Habitat type + distance to nearest village | 76.99 | 3 | 8.35 | 0.011 |
| 1.5. Elevation | 88.82 | 2 | 18.18 | 0.000 |
2log likelihood is the overall fit of each model, K is the number of parameters in each model, ΔAIC is the measurement of each model relative to the top ranked model, and w is the AIC model weight.
Orangutan home range (HR) size estimates (in ha) during crop-raiding (CR) and non crop-raiding (NCR) periods using minimum convex polygon (MCP), 100×100 m grid-cell based and Kernel Density Estimation (KDE) methods, and mean daily journey length (MDJ, in m; ±SD) and mean daily linear distance (MLD, in m; ±SD).
| Age/sex | # follow days | Maximum HR | # nest-nest | Total | ||||||
| class | (# of data points) | MCP (100%) | Grid | KDE (95%) | KDE (50%) | CR | NCR | follow days | MDJ | MLD |
| Adult1 ♀ | 29 (533) | 58 | 123 | 125 | 233 | 58 | 15 | 16 | 780 (±637) | 278 (±232) |
| Adult2 ♀ | 43 (795) | 137 | 211 | 267 | 265 | 137 | 49 | 23 | 840 (±605) | 249 (±189) |
| Adult3 ♀ | 16 (215) | 187 | 145 | 286 | 310 | 104 | 157 | 13 | 926 (±852) | 486 (±584) |
| Adult4 ♀ | 54 (1001) | 142 | 184 | 121 | 190 | 128 | 90 | 38 | 627 (±911) | 174 (±263) |
| Adult5 ♀ | 22 (392) | 131 | 162 | 274 | 278 | 92 | 88 | 11 | 1155 (±711) | 166 (±137) |
| Adult1 ♂ | 34 (570) | 355 | 175 | 385 | 510 | 343 | 293 | 12 | 479 (±335) | 224 (±190) |
| Adult2 ♂ | 26 (525) | 330 | 135 | 385 | 353 | 326 | 46 | 15 | 968 (±712) | 305 (±318) |
| Adult3 ♂ | 48 (939) | 583 | 298 | 394 | 447 | 581 | 198 | 29 | 1157 (±706) | 324 (±328) |
| Mean adult ♀ | 131 | 165 | 214 | 255 | 104 | 80 | 866 (±195) | 271 (±130) | ||
| Mean adult ♂ | 423 | 203 | 388 | 437 | 416 | 179 | 868 (±350) | 284 (±53) | ||
* CR: during days when orangutans were recorded to raid cultivated crops, NCR: days orangutans were recorded to eat wild fruits only (i.e. not crop-raiding).
MDJ and MLD are based on full day follows (n = 157 days).
Orangutan home range size estimates (in ha) from Borneo (B) and Sumatra (S) using minimum convex polygon method.
| Source | Study site | Duration (month) | Adult females | Adult males |
| Singleton & van Schaik (2001) | Suaq Balimbing (S) | 52 | 150 - >850 | >2500 |
| Rijksen (1978) | Ketambe (S) | 38 | 150–200 | > Females |
| Unpublished data | Ketambe (S) | 48 | 300–400 | > Females |
| Suzuki (1992) | Mentoko (B) | Several visits | >150 | 500–700 |
| Mitani (1989) | Mentoko (B) | 18 | >150 | > Females |
| Rodman (1988) | Mentoko (B) | 15 | 40–60 | 60–120 |
| Galdikas (1988) | Tanjung Puting (B) | 48 | 350–600 | > Females |
| Horr (1975, 1977) | Lokan (B) | 25 | 65 | 520 |
| Unpublished data | Kinabatangan (B) | 48 | 180 | >225 |
| Unpublished data | Tuanan (B) | 18 | 250–300 | > Females |
| Unpublished data | Sabangau (B) | 24 | 250–300 | >560 |
| Knott et al. in press | Gunung Palung (B) | 103 | 600 | >650 |
| This study | Batang Serangan | 24 | 58–187 | 330–583 |
Data table adapted from Singelton et al., 2009 [52] and Utami et al., 2009 [34].
1, Ketambe orangutan project Universitas Nasional Jakarta & Utrecht University Netherlands;
2, Ancrenaz and James;
3, Tuanan orangutan project Universitas Nasional Jakarta & University of Zürich;
4, Morrogh-Bernard.