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FLORA AND FAUNA
British zoo to help Borneo orangutans
by Staff Writers
Chester, England (UPI) Aug 22, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

A British zoo says it will help Borneo construct special "orangutan bridges" to allow the animals to move around in an area fragmented by deforestation.

A team from Chester Zoo will work with the Kinabatangan Orangutan Conservation Project this year to construct the bridges, the BBC reported Monday.

Marc Ancrenaz, co-founder of the Kinabatangan project, says the organization has been building bridges because studies have shown the local orangutan populations have been fragmented and isolated from each other by vast tracts of palm oil plantations, roads, villages, and rivers.

Unlike many other primate species, orangutans cannot swim, so rivers become impassable barriers.

The zoo team will build bridges out of a tough polyester webbing material used to make swings and hammocks in the zoo's orangutan enclosure.

The webbing has been proven to be "orangutan-proof," Nick Davis of the Chester Zoo said, and "we're limited in the materials we can use, because they destroy everything."

"It's a very strong material that's used for strapping," Davis said. "And it's really hardy so it doesn't rot.

"[The aim of the bridges] is to cover the drainage channels and tributaries that come from the palm oil plantations.

"The worry is that the forest out there has been so fragmented that the orangutans can't move around at all."




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Sweden fears swimming raccoon invasion
Stockholm, Sweden (UPI) Aug 23, 2011 - Swedish game wardens say they are worried an explosion of the raccoon population in neighboring Denmark may lead to a swimming invasion by the animals.

The Oresund, the 2.5-mile stretch of water which connects the Baltic Sea to the Atlantic Ocean and separates the two countries, isn't enough to keep the animals from entering Sweden, wildlife officials said.

"They're good swimmers," wildlife officer Bertil Nilsson told The Local Tuesday.

The raccoons are a threat because of rabies, tapeworm and their destructive potential in wetlands, he said.

"In Finland the large wetlands areas are all but emptied of ground-nesting birds and frogs," Nilsson said.

Authorities said cameras are in place along the Oresund to monitor the threat.

"It's really very serious, they're spreading very quickly in Denmark," Nilsson said.

Raccoons are not indigenous to northern Europe and are considered an invasive species.





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FLORA AND FAUNA
Poached baby mountain gorilla doing well: vet
Musanze, Rwanda (AFP) Aug 22, 2011
A highly-endangered mountain gorilla infant rescued from poachers earlier this month is recovering well according to officials with the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project. "She was clearly sick and traumatized when we found her," Jan Ramer, MGVP veterinary manager, told AFP Monday. "But now she seems healthy. She is comfortable with her care givers and shes getting more and more confident." ... read more


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