INDONESIA: The lowland tropical rain forests in Indonesian Borneo could disappear in five years due to rampant logging and forest fires, endangering the survival of many exotic species, according to an international conservation group.
The world's third-largest island has lost forests equivalent to an area one-third the size of Switzerland every year, or at a rate of 1.3 million hectares. It is home to more than 210 mammal species, including 44 found only in Borneo.
In its report called Treasure Island at Risk, the World Wide Fund (WWF) yesterday said the loss of forest would drastically affect the island's wildlife, endangering ecological wonders such as the pygmy elephant and orang-utan, whose long-term survival is already in doubt.
"The consequences of this scale of deforestation will not only result in a major loss of species but also disrupt water supplies and reduce future economic opportunities such as tourism and subsistence for local communities," Chris Elliott, director of the WWF's Global Forest Programme, said in a statement.
By 2020, the remaining populations of orang-utans may be too small to be genetically viable due to fragmentation of their habitat, the WWF report said.
Indonesia, having lost more than 70 per cent of its original frontier forest, has launched a crackdown on illegal logging, but many activists complain the authorities have failed to catch the big bosses behind the lucrative trade.
Indonesia shares jurisdiction of Borneo at the centre of Indonesia's archipelago, with Malaysia and Brunei. The WWF wants to help the three nations to convert more than 22 million hectares of rainforest in an area known as "Heart of Borneo" into a reserve taking up a quarter of the island.
"We can still achieve conservation on a big scale and win before we are left with small, fragmented forest patches," said Stuart Chapman of the Heart of Borneo Initiative. - (Reuters)