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Indonesia: Cyclone Kills 7% of Rare Tapanuli Orangutans

Researchers said climate change intensified Cyclone Senyar, which killed 58 orangutans and destroyed about 20,000 acres of habitat.

  • On Wednesday, a new report revealed that climate change-fuelled landslides killed at least 58 critically endangered Tapanuli orangutans on Indonesia's Sumatra island.
  • Rapid deforestation and extreme rainfall made hilly landscapes vulnerable to landslides, as Cyclone Senyar destroyed huge tracts of forest and killed more than 1,000 people in 2025.
  • Research indicates the loss represents about 7% of the total Tapanuli population of fewer than 800, while humanitarian workers described the forest area as a "graveyard" for wildlife.
  • Lead author Erik Meijaard of Borneo Futures stated, "This level of loss is substantial for a species," noting that ongoing habitat degradation and human-wildlife conflict increase extinction risks.
  • Experts urged international partners to provide immediate biodiversity-recovery financing in Indonesia, emphasizing that preventing the first modern extinction of a great ape requires permanent protection of the Batang Toru ecosystem.
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67 Articles

WMURWMUR
+20 Reposted by 20 other sources
Center

Devastating cyclone wiped out 7% of planet’s rarest great apes, study says

A cyclone that brought catastrophic flooding and devastating landslides wiped out more than 7% of the global population of the world’s rarest great apes, a new study has found.

·New Hampshire, United States
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CNNCNN
+5 Reposted by 5 other sources
Lean Left

How one devastating cyclone wiped out more than 7% of the planet’s rarest great apes

Four days of extreme rain in Indonesia triggered devastating landslides, killing dozens of critically endangered Tapanuli orangutans

·Atlanta, United States
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Lean Right

Four days of extreme rain was enough to hit massively the already tiny population of tapanuli orangutans. Researchers speak of a catastrophe for the endangered species, with far-reaching consequences.

·Berlin, Germany
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foe.org broke the news on Wednesday, April 1, 2026.
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