Save Orangutans from Extinction

Summary

Rare is preventing orangutan extinction by launching three Pride campaigns in Indonesia to save their habitats from destruction. By helping the local people live more sustainably, everybody wins. progress reportread updates from the field

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Received $4,607 from 133 donations from people like:

More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

To gain local support for the orangutan and preserving their habitat, project leaders Eddy Santoso, Bobby Nopandry and Ade Yuliana will use creative tools like radio songs, billboards and school visits to help deliver the conservation message, and teach farmers how to make a living without clearing forests. $10,000 will help cover transportation costs from village to village, and be used to create the marketing tools necessary to engage local communities.

Activities

These project leaders along with Rare and local Indonesian partners will use community outreach to raise awareness of natural resources and alternative livelihoods to help preserve the orangutan habitats. Community visits are absolutely vital.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $4,607
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $5,393
Total Funding Goal: $10,000

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

There will be reduced amounts of forest area sold and converted into oil palm plantations, increased adoption of permanent agricultural systems, and growing community dedication to conservation leading to a healthy orangutan habitat.

Project Message

Rare understands that lasting solutions to problems must be implemented by the people most affected by those problems.
- Yvon Chouinard, Founder of Patagonia and longtime Rare supporter

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Amy Doherty

1840 Wilson Blvd.
Suite 204
Arlington, VA 22201
United States
703-522-5070
Email:

Project Sponsor

RARE

Organization

Rare
1840 Wilson Blvd Suite 204
Arlington, VA 22201
United States
703-522-5070
http://www.rareconservation.org

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Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in IndonesiaIndonesia and can also be found under AnimalsAnimals.

For more information about Indonesia, read the Human Development Report on Indonesia or the Wikipedia entry for Indonesia.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on November 6, 2009.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on October 7, 2008

Latest Update from the Field

Full Speed Ahead on the Road to Conservation in Indonesia

By Amy Rinaldi - Coordinator, Individual Giving Programs, May 23, 2009 08:10 AM

Eddy and partners collaborate to produce community surveys.
Back in the field and ready for action – local conservation leader Eddy Santoso leads the Rare Pride campaign in Lamandau Wildlife Reserve, which aims to reach out to the communities in and around the reserve to protect the orangutan.

In February 2009, Rare Pride Campaign Manager Eddy Santoso returned to the field from his university training to plan and determine the goals of his Pride Campaign. This training gives Eddy the essential skills to deploy various community outreach strategies tailored to his community’s current culture regarding conservation. Some of the tools Eddy uses to disseminate the importance of protecting the reserve include a charismatic campaign mascot, radio songs about conservation, conservation messaged posters, community meetings, etc. These tools are designed to modify core values, lower behavioral barriers, and address the most urgent environmental issues in efforts to save the orangutan and the orangutan habitat.

Eddy’s employer, Yayorin, along with the Orangutan Foundation, are Rare’s local partners for this new Pride campaign. Lamandau Wildlife Reserve and its surrounding corridors are the primary focus of Eddy’s campaign. Comprised of 77,000 hectares of peat swamp and lowland tropical forest, Lamandau is home to some of Borneo’s most extraordinary wildlife. Proboscis monkeys, Rhinoceros hornbills, crocodiles, sun bears, orchids, hundreds of bird species, and the iconic orangutan. Threats to Lamandau’s biodiversity include land clearing for subsistence agriculture, illegal logging, and unsustainable or illegal hunting, fishing, and fuelwood collection. Larger threats on the horizon include proposals for industrial-scale oil palm plantations, which would mean clearing a significant majority of the buffer zone since global demand for palm oil has skyrocketed as worldwide hunger for biofuels has grown.

This year Rare and its partner organizations will build on these local agencies’ existing skills and experience in education and community outreach to launch a Rare Pride Campaign in Lamandau Wildlife Reserve. Lamandau’s forest still stands in large enough pieces to provide habitat for the orangutans. The Pride campaign is aiming to protect the remaining forest by engaging surrounding communities to protect and rehabilitate areas adjacent to the reserve, and empowering local communities to become beneficiaries of their own good stewardship of the forests on which they rely. Rare and local partners believe that enough forest can be preserved and maintained to support the needs of both people of the forest and orangutans.

Thanks to campaign supporters, Eddy is making great progress so far. He has identified threats and created a concept model that illustrates how threats affect wildlife, and has developed relevant conservation survey questions for the Lamandau’s surrounding communities. Together with Yayorin staff, Eddy is conducting surveys in a dozen surrounding communities and comparing results to those of six control communities around the Lamandau Wildlife Reserve. This process informs Eddy and his partners where current attitudes and behaviors stand with regard to Lamandau’s resources, providing a baseline from which the Pride campaign can determine metrics for future success.

Eddy and local partners have been reaching out to craftsmen and village leaders, activists and farmers, oil palm workers, rubber tree tappers and others harvesting from the forest to learn about their behaviors and to engage them in conserving orangutan habitat. Eddy’s campaign will also inspire another receptive audience-- children. Eddy has been visiting schools and using tools like stories and coloring books to inform children in a fun and interesting way about preserving Lamandau’s natural resources. This kind of outreach is just one of several tools Eddy will continue to use over the duration of his Pride campaign, which is scheduled to conclude in July 2010.

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