Leuser Ecosystem

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Summary

Forest view in Leuser Ecosystem © Perry van Duijnhoven
  • Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii) are present in the Leuser Ecosystem.
  • It has been estimated that 13,846 (CI: 11,561-16,805) individuals occur in the site.
  • The orangutan population trend is decreasing.
  • The site has a total size of 2.6 million ha.
  • Key threats to orangutans are deforestation, construction of roads and planned construction of hydroelectric power plants, poaching, and capturing of young orangutans for the illegal pet trade.
  • Several NGOs are involved in the implementation of conservation interventions; for example, the Human-Orangutan Conflict Response Unit rescues and relocates orangutans trapped by humans.

Site characteristics

The site is located in the provinces of Aceh and North Sumatra, at the northernmost tip of Sumatra, Indonesia. The area is extremely rich in biodiversity; more than 200 mammal species, 580 bird species, and an estimated 10,000 plant species, including 17 endemic genera, can be found at the Leuser Ecosystem. Within Leuser, the coastal peat swamp forests of Tripa, Kluet, and Trumon-Singkil harbour the highest densities of orangutans. In addition to Sumatran orangutans, the Leuser Ecosystem is also home to the last remaining viable populations of Sumatran tigers, Sumatran rhinoceros, and Sumatran elephants (Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme). The Leuser Ecosystem is designated as a National Strategic Area for its environmental function. This designation does not exclude non-forest uses, but stresses the importance of sustainable management (Singleton et al. 2018). The Gunung Leuser National Park is found within the Leuser Ecosystem, which is also designated a Man and Biosphere Reserve, and is part of the Tropical Rainforest Heritage of Sumatra World Heritage Cluster Site by UNESCO (Singleton et al. 2018). The park supports only 25.3% of Sumatra’s Orangutans. Also within the Leuser Ecosystem, is the 1,025 km² Singkil Swamps Wildlife Reserve (Singleton et al. 2018).

Table 1. Basic site information for Leuser Ecosystem

Species Pongo abelii
Area 26000 km²
Coordinates 3.630896, 97.378969
Type of site Conservation area (National Strategic Area)
Governance type Governance by government
Habitat type Subtropical/tropical dry forest, plantations, subtropical/tropical heavily degraded former forest

Types of sitesGovernance typesHabitat types

  • Sumatran orangutan © Perry van Duijnhoven
  • Female orangutan © Perry van Duijnhoven
  • Flanged male Sumatran orangutan © Perry van Duijnhoven

Ape status

The peat-swamp forests of the Leuser Ecosystem hold the highest Sumatran orangutan densities (Wich et al. 2016). The species is predicted to decline across a variety of land-use scenarios; as many as 4,500 individuals could vanish by 2030 (Wich et al. 2016).

Table 2. Ape population estimates in Leuser Ecosystem

Species Year Occurrence Encounter or visitation rate (nests/km; ind/day) Density estimate [ind/ km²] (95% CI) Abundance estimate (95% CI) Survey area Sampling method Analytical framework Source Comments A.P.E.S. database ID
Pongo abelii 1999-2013 Present 0.73 13846 (11561-16805) Leuser Ecosystem Line transects Wich et al. 2016

Sampling methodsAnalytical frameworks

Threats

Key threats to orangutans at the Leuser Ecosystem include habitat destruction, habitat fragmentation, hunting, and the illegal pet trade (SOCP). New roads are continuously being cut through the habitat. In addition to habitat encroachment, palm oil concessions, and new hydro electric schemes and geothermal energy plants are proposed in critical areas (SOCP). As a by-product of land-conversion and increased proximity to humans, orangutans are sometimes killed due to human-wildlife conflict situations, for example, when orangutans raid farmlands (Singleton et al. 2018).

  • Deforestation for small scale agriculture © Perry van Duijnhoven
  • Draining canals in peat swamp © Perry van Duijnhoven
  • Small-scale logging © Perry van Duijnhoven

Table 3. Threats to apes in Leuser Ecosystem

Category Specific threats Threat level Description Year of threat
1. Residential & commercial development Unknown
2. Agriculture & aquaculture Unknown
3. Energy production & mining 3.3 Renewable energy Low Proposed construction of several new hydroelectric power plants leading to habitat loss (Wich pers. comm. 2020; SOCP). Ongoing (2020)
4. Transportation & service corridors 4.1 Roads & railroads Medium The construction of roads is causing forest loss and forest fragmentation (Wich et al. 2016). Ongoing (2016)
5. Biological resource use 5.1.5 Persecution/human wildlife conflict Low Poaching/persecution. Orangutans are captured or killed when they leave the forest and enter agricultural land or areas that have been recently deforested (Wich et al 2016; Singleton et al. 2018). 2016-Ongoing (2018)
5. Biological resource use 5.1.4 Capture for the live animal trade Present (unknown severity) Capturing young orangutans for illegal pet trade (SOCP). Ongoing (2023)
5. Biological resource use 5.3 Logging & wood harvesting Medium Deforestation as a result of land-cover changes (Wich et al. 2016). Ongoing (2016)
6. Human intrusion & disturbance Unknown
7. Natural system modifications Unknown
8. Invasive & other problematic species, genes, diseases Unknown
9. Pollution Unknown
10. Geological Events Absent
11. Climate change & severe weather Unknown
12. Other options Absent

Threats

Conservation activities

A number of NGOs are active in the implementation of conservation activities, including the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP), the Orangutan Information Center (OIC), the Leuser International Foundation (LIF), and HAkA.

Table 4. Conservation activities in Leuser Ecosystem

Category Specific activity Description Implementing organization Year of activity
1. Development impact mitigation Not reported
2. Counter-wildlife crime Not reported
3. Species health Not reported
4. Education & awareness Not reported
5. Protection & restoration Not reported
6. Species management 6.7 Translocate (capture & release) wild apes from human impacted sites to natural habitat elsewhere The Human-Orangutan Conflict Response Unit rescue, relocate, and confiscate orangutans in human-orangutan conflict situations (OIC). Ongoing (2023)
7. Economic & other incentives Not reported
8. Permanent presence Not reported

Conservation activities

Conservation implementation challenges and enablers

Table 5. Challenges reported for Leuser Ecosystem

Category Challenge Source Year(s)
1. Site management 1.2 Need for improved coordination Wich pers. comm. 2020
2. Resources & capacity Not reported
3. Engaged community Not reported
4. Institutional support 4.1 Lack of law enforcement Singleton et al. 2018
4. Institutional support 4.3 Lack of protected area status Singleton et al. 2018
5. Ecological context Not reported
6. Safety & stability Not reported

Challenges

Table 6. Enablers reported for Leuser Ecosystem

Category Enabler Source Year(s)
1. Site management Not reported
2. Resources & capacity Not reported
3. Engaged community Not reported
4. Institutional support Not reported
5. Ecological context Not reported
6. Safety & stability Not reported

Enablers

Research activities

Documented behaviours

Table 7. Ape behaviors reported for Leuser Ecosystem

Behavior Source
Not reported

External links

Leuser International Foundation
HAkA
OIC
SOCP

References

Singleton, I., Wich , S.A., Nowak, M., Usher, G. & Utami-Atmoko, S.S. 2017. Pongo abelii (errata version published in 2018). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017: e.T121097935A123797627. http://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T121097935A115575085.en

Page completed by: Serge Wich & A.P.E.S. Wiki team Date: 30/12/2020