Orangutan handed over to center to mate
A 15-year-old orangutan from Kalimantan named Tita was handed over on
Tuesday evening to the Central Java Natural Resources Conservation
Agency (BKSDA) by her owner, Ari Santoso of Ploso hamlet, Karanggondang
village, Mlonggo district, Jepara regency, Central Java.
Six
BKSDA officers collected Tita and placed her in an iron cage on a truck.
The truck arrived at the Central Java BKSDA office at around 7 p.m.
local time after the long trip from Jepara.
“The owner obtained
Tita as a gift from a Dayak resident when he was working for a timber
company in Samarinda, East Kalimantan, in 2000,” said Central Java BKSDA
head Suharman.
Tita was then 5 months old. Ari took care of Tita
and treated her as pet. She was fed on rice, papaya, banana and even
sweet tea and syrup, and lived in a narrow 2-meter high and 1.5-m wide
cage.
“The cage was made of industrial scrap wood, so it was very
simple. It was in the back yard of Ari’s house. The family also often
took Tita for a walk,” said Central Java BKSDA Conservation Section head
Johan Setiawan.
As Tita grew older and became a teenager, Ari
realized that she would have a strong desire to mate as her animal
instincts appeared normal. He reported Tita’s presence to the Sidomuncil
Conservation Institute (LKS) in Ungaran, Semarang regency, Central
Java, after learning that the center also took care of other orangutans.
The institute reported the matter to the Central Java BKSDA, which came to Jepara to remove Tita.
When
Tita arrived at BKSDA, she was deemed clean but overweight, weighing
around 100 kilograms, compared to an ideal weight of between 70 and 80
kg.
“That was because Tita was underactive due to her small cage. She could not hang about like in the wild,” Johan said.
Tita,
who no longer wants to drink plain water, will be placed in the safe
custody of the LKS. Suharman said that Law No. 5/1990 on natural
resources and biological ecosystem stipulated that residents were not
allowed to keep protected animals as pets, as also regulated in
Government Regulation No. 7/1999 on plants and wildlife preservation.
Tita
is categorized as a Pongo pygmaeus orangutan breed, which only lives in
Kalimantan, or Borneo Island, and is a protected animal.
Suharman
said Ari claimed he kept Tita as a pet because he was unaware that
orangutans were categorized as protected animals. “We will provide him
counseling regarding the matter,” said Suharman.
Tita will be
placed in quarantine prior to mixing with other orangutans at LKS as she
undergoes complete medical examination until she is considered healthy.
_____________________
“The
cage was made of industrial scrap wood, so it was very simple. It was
in the back yard of Ari’s house. The family also often took Tita for a
walk.”
source : http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2014/09/25/orangutan-handed-over-center-mate.html
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