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BackSumatra floods kill nearly 7% of world's most endangered orangutans
Sumatra floods kill nearly 7% of world's most endangered orangutans
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BBC World6/11/2026Environment2 min readUnited Kingdom

Sumatra floods kill nearly 7% of world's most endangered orangutans

Quick Look

  • A study reveals that extreme rain and landslides in Sumatra last November killed an estimated 58 Tapanuli orangutans, nearly 7% of the critically endangered species.
  • Experts warn that increased rainfall frequency threatens their survival.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Four days of extreme rain and landslides in Sumatra last November resulted in the deaths of an estimated 58 Tapanuli orangutans, representing nearly 7% of the critically endangered species. This event highlights the vulnerability of the species to extreme weather, which is predicted to increase in frequency and intensity.

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Four days of extreme rain and landslides in the Indonesian island of Sumatra have pushed the world's most endangered great apes even closer to extinction, says a study.

Research suggests that 58 of less than 800 critically endangered Tapanuli orangutans, or around 7% of the total species, were killed as a result of the extreme weather event last November.

Those are conservative figures, and do not take into account rain-induced canopy damage or reduced food availability, said the authors of the study published on Wednesday.

Wildlife experts and conservationists had previously observed that, in the wake of the storm, Tapanuli orangutan sightings had dissipated - fuelling speculation that the great apes may have been swept away by floods and landslides.

Professor Erik Meijaard, managing director of Borneo Futures in Brunei and an author of the study published on Wednesday, had told the BBC in December that Cyclone Senyar had likely killed about 35 orangutans – a loss which he said would constitute "a major blow to the population".

Weeks after the cyclone, humanitarian workers told the BBC they found the carcass of what they believed to be a Tapanuli orangutan semi-buried amid debris of mud and logs in Pulo Pakkat village in central Tapanuli district.

"I have seen several dead bodies of humans in the past few days but this was the first dead wildlife," said Deckey Chandra, who was working with a humanitarian team in the area. "They used to come to this place to eat fruits. But now it seems to have become their graveyard."

"What struck me is that all the flesh had been ripped off the face," he said. "If a few hectares of forest comes down in massive landslides, even powerful orangutans are helpless and just get mangled."

They also noted that the frequency and intensity of extreme rainfall in the area is likely to continue in the future, posing a threat to the survival of Tapanuli orangutans and their habitat.

Studies indicate that the species - which was only discovered in 2017 - will go extinct if it continues to lose more than 1% of its population annually.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • The Tapanuli orangutan species will go extinct if it continues to lose more than 1% of its population annually.

    Very likely · Within years

  • Frequency and intensity of extreme rainfall in the area will continue to increase.

    Likely · Medium term

Open Questions

  • What is the exact total number of Tapanuli orangutans killed?
  • What are the long-term impacts on the orangutan population's breeding and social structures?
  • What specific conservation measures are being implemented or planned to mitigate future risks?
  • How will the reduced food availability affect the surviving orangutans?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC World.

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