Bornean Orangutan

The Bornean Orangutan (also known as Bornean Orang-utan) is a small to average size hominid that is spread across the jungles of Borneo. Orangutans, the world’s largest tree-dwelling mammals in the world, are found on only two islands in the world – Borneo and Sumatra. This makes the Bornean Orangutan, along with the Sumatran, the only genus of great apes indigenous to Asia.

Scientific Classification

Animalia
Chordata
Mammalia
Primates
Hominidae
Pongo
Pongo pygmaeus

Bornean Orangutan

Bornean Orangutan

Physical Description: What does a Bornean Orangutan Look Like

Size: The head-body length of the male is 97 cm; for the female it is 78.
Weight: Males weigh between 60 and 90 kg; females weigh 40 – 50 kg.
Fur: Coarse coat hair with a shaggy appearance; rusty brown in color.
Body: Shape of body is distinct. Face skin is bare and black in adults, but often pinkish around the eyes and muzzle in young.
Flanges: Some males have flangs (cheek pads), based on which two varieties have been distinguished – the ‘flanged’ and ‘unflanged’.
Arms and Feet: Arms are very long reaching up to 2 meters. Both hands and feet are grasping.
Sexual Dimorphism: Males are larger and have check pads, unlike the females.

Lifespan

In the wild, the Bornean Orangutans live for 35 to 45 years. But in captivity, they live longer – for up to 60 years.

Habitat: Where do Bornean Orangutans Live

The Bornean orangutans primarily live in lowland areas, and in hilly tropical rainforests at elevations of up to 800 metres above sea level.

Distribution and Classification of Species

  1. Central Bornean Orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii) – the most widely spread subtype with almost 35,000 individuals remaining, and are found in the Southern West Kalimantan and the Central Kalimantan region (Indonesia),
  2. Northwest Bornean Orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus) – the most threatened subspecies with only 1,500 heads remaining. They are spread in Sarawak (Malaysia) and the northern West Kalimantan region (Indonesia),
  3. Northeast Bornean Orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus morio) – the smallest of all the three types, and are seen in the East Kalimantan (Indonesia) and in Sabah (Malaysia)
Bornean Orangutan Map

Bornean Orangutan Map

 Bornean Orangutan Habitat

Bornean Orangutan Habitat

Differences: Bornean vs. Sumatran Orang-utans

  • While both the types have reddish or copper-color hair all over their bodies, the Sumatran counterparts have longer facial hair.
  • The Sumatrans are almost exclusively arboreal, the Bornean hominids, in contrast, would often come to the ground, especially the males.
  • The social structure and bond between the Borneans are less strong compared to their Sumatran cousins.
Bornean Orangutans

Bornean Orangutans

Behavioral Characteristics

The Bornean orangutan is diurnal and arboreal. Their hand-like feet make walking way too difficult. While all Bornean orangutans display lonesome behavior, but they are not territorial. However, the males display warning gestures to ward off sexual competitors only during mating season.

Females sometimes roam around with the babies for foraging in small groups of 6 or more before when the trees start fruiting. Brachiation (moving from branch to branch hanging by their hands) is common in juveniles. The adults would usually move around quadrupedally, or at times bipedally. Unlike other great apes (viz., humans, chimpanzees, gorillas), they would walk on their fists rather than the knuckles.

Every night, they build nest platforms 40 to 60 feet off the ground level for sleeping, using vegetation to keep the bed soft. They cannot use their thumbs, but instead, the other fingers and palm to pluck fruits. These animals also can’t swim – a disability that has limited their boundaries up to the rivers and other water bodies within their range.

Bornean Orangutan Face

Bornean Orangutan Face

Bornean Orangutan Pictures

Bornean Orangutan Pictures

Mating and Reproduction

The otherwise lonesome male Borneans indulge in temporary socialization with the females during mating season. While choosing a partner, the males emit a peculiar sound or call audible up to a distance of 3 km. The females would accept a partner if only the male has ‘jipeks’, or cheekpads, which they develop when they are in their 20s.

Male Bornean Orangutan

Male Bornean Orangutan

Bornean Orangutan Baby

Bornean Orangutan Baby

Video: Mating Vocalization of the Adult Male

Females attain sexual maturity between 6 and 11 years, when they experience the first ovulatory cycle. The estrous cycle lasts for 22 days to one month. Age of pregnancy is 14 to 15 years, while the maximum age of menopause is 48.

Life Cycle

The mothers would care for the babies more often than the father, nursing the offspring every 3-4 hours for up to 6-7 years. By age 4-months, they learn accepting tender food from their mothers’ lips. During the first year, the young ones move around clinging to their mothers’ abdomen by gripping the fur. Usually, the baby orangutan is weaned at about 4 years. However, they would always stay within the sight of the mother.

Bornean Orangutan Images

Bornean Orangutan Images

The young orangutans reach the age of maturity at around 8 and learn living independently. However, the young females would continue to stay with their mothers until they are teens, and learn the essential parenting skills from their mothers by observing how the younger siblings are taken care of. This is essential, since without this lesson the young females will not be able to rear their own babies.

Cute Bornean Orangutan

Cute Bornean Orangutan

Diet: What Do Bornean Orangutans Eat

Bornean orangutans are primarily herbivores, or more precisely frugivores. They swing from tree to tree, feeding on leaves, barks, flowers, insects, seeds, bird eggs, honey, and fruits like figs, durians, jackfruits, lychees, mangosteens, mangoes, etc. They usually prefer unripe fruits. In rare occasions, they have been seen preying upon smaller primates like slow lorises.

Bornean Orangutan Diet

Bornean Orangutan Diet

Adaptations

  1. These arboreal Orangutans have evolved with firm hands and hand-like feet to grip strongly.
  2. The arms are very long in order to reach branches easily.
  3. They have flexible hips resisting them from slipping down from treetops.

Tool-using Skills

These intelligent hominids use different tools in daily life to make task easier. They would use large leaves to hold water while drinking, while during the dry months, they would chew leaves to use them like sponge to soak moisture from tree hollows.

The Bornean Orangutan

The Bornean Orangutan

They have even been noticed using spear-like branches to catch fish, or long twigs from trees to dig out insects from their holes for consumption. During the rains, they would hold large branches of leaves like umbrellas while travelling, or use leaves to wipe off their faces.

Video: Adult using Leaf Umbrella in the Rain

Predators: What Eats a Bornean Orangutan

While their main predators of the Sumatran Orangutan are tiger and leopard, the Bornean Orangutan’s only predator is the leopard since there are no tigers in Borneo. The juvenile and young ones are more vulnerable to predation.

Bornean Orangutan Eating

Bornean Orangutan Eating

Conservation Status

The Bornean Orangutan is a threatened species, and the IUCN 3.1 has officially categorized them under the ‘EN’ (Endangered) species list.

Interesting Facts

  • Like human babies, their babies too whimper, cry and smile at their mothers.
  • The rate of reproduction in the Bornean Orangutans is extremely slow since the females give birth once in every 8 years. Thus, the population of these hominids would take decades to restore if they are struck by human activities or natural disasters.
  • The Bornean and the Sumatran Orangutans diverged from each other almost 400,000 years ago.
  • Bornean Orangutans are facing threats through illegal pet trade and the trade with orangutan skulls, with each skull fetching up to USD 70.
  • The 1997-98 forest fires killed almost 8000 orangutans.
  • Baby orangutans actively seek for other young friends to play and travel with.
  • Modern human being shares 97% of his DNA with these primates.

2 responses to “Bornean Orangutan”

  1. Caleb says:

    I love your website I am doing a report on the Bornean Orangutang

  2. mike says:

    I am too!

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