this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2025
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Mongabay

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JAVA — Indonesia. Throughout the misty mountains of central Java, the call of the Javan gibbon (Hylobates moloch) once echoed throughout the forest. Today, their voices are fading. Java is one of the most densely populated regions on Earth, and decades of logging, agriculture and infrastructure development have fragmented the forest, while rampant hunting and the illegal pet trade have also taken their toll. With only an estimated 4,000 Javan gibbons left in the wild, they are now listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List. Many of the remaining populations have been left stranded in disconnected patches of forest, unable to move without uninterrupted canopy cover. Conservationists warn this isolation makes them vulnerable to disease and limits their ability to find mates, leading to inbreeding. To address this, local NGO SwaraOwa has been working with local communities to reconnect these isolated areas of forest. By planting “forest corridors,” stretches of native trees that link up isolated forest blocks, they hope to provide a green pathway for gibbons to find their way back into larger areas of forest, and the other gibbons that live there. The corridors not only allow the gibbons to move, but also support countless other species that depend on Java’s forest ecosystems. SwaraOwa believes working with the local community is the key to success. Young farmers in Medolo village have taken the lead in growing native seedlings and restoring key areas between forests. As trees begin to take root and corridors expand, conservationists and locals alike…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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