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This Newly Discovered Orangutan Species Is Already on the Brink of Extinction

Examining clues from fur texture and skull shape to DNA, scientists recently discovered a new species of orangutan that happens to be the rarest great ape species on earth.

This Newly Discovered Orangutan Species Is Already on the Brink of Extinction
A tapanuli orangutan. (World Press Photo/Tim Laman.)

On November 2, scientists revealed they’d identified an entirely new species of orangutan, which is critically endangered and in vital need of protection. Living solely in the secluded Batang Toru forest within Northern Sumatra, Indonesia, the population of Pongo tapanuliensis, or Tapanuli orangutans, hovers around 800, making it the rarest great ape species alive.

Imposing and magnificent, orangutans are the largest tree-dwelling mammals; their name means “person of the forest” in Indonesian and Malay. They tend to be somewhat solitary creatures, swinging from branches, eating fruit, and sleeping while hoisted high in the forest canopy. Previously, scientists classified all orangutans into one of two known species, both also critically endangered: Borneos and Sumatrans. First reported in the 1930s and re-discovered in 1997, orangutans living in Batang Toru were curiosities within the scientific community. Most scientists assumed they were Sumatrans, despite marked behavioral and genetic differences within the population: it wasn’t clear that any of these merited calling the apes a new species.

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