2020 Photo Contest, Nature, 1st Prize

Saving Orangutans

Photographer

Alain Schroeder

For National Geographic

11 April, 2019

Nazarudin (26) handles the first soft release of Kamala, a six-year-old female orangutan at Jantho Reintroduction Centre, located in the Jantho Pine Forest Nature Reserve on Sumatra, Indonesia. This will happen daily for several weeks, and her behavior monitored. If she adapts well, she will be released to the wild.

Indonesia’s orangutans are under severe threat from the ongoing depletion of the rainforest. Sumatran orangutans, which once ranged over the entire island of Sumatra, are now restricted to the north and critically endangered. They are almost exclusively arboreal: females virtually never travel on the ground and adult males do so rarely. As logging, mining, and palm oil cultivation increase, orangutans find themselves squeezed into smaller pockets of forest, forced out of their natural habitat and in more frequent conflict with humans. Organizations such as the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Programme (SOCP) care for lost, injured and captive orangutans, aiming to reintroduce them into the wild. Human caregivers take on the maternal role that female orangutans play, aiming to reintroduce young to their natural habitat at around the age of seven or eight, when they would naturally leave their mothers in the wild.

About the photographer

Alain Schroeder

Alain Schroeder is a Belgian photojournalist born in 1955. In 1989 he founded Reporters, a photo agency in Belgium.  Schroeder’s work has been published in National...

Technical information

Shutter Speed
1/125
Focal length
14mm
F-Stop
2.8
ISO
1600
Camera
Fujifilm X-Pro2

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