Endangered Orangutans in Bukit Lawang Indonesia

BUKIT LAWANG, INDONESIA - JUNE 13: A female orangutan with a 4-month old baby walks near tourists after visiting a rainforest feeding station June 13, 2009 at Bukit Lawang, Sumatra, Indonesia. Bukit Lawang offers the public a rare glimpse of the endangered orangutans on the edge of the Gunung Leuser National Park. The orang-hutan, which is a Malay word for "person of the forest," often live up to 30-40 years in the wild. Bukit Lawang's orangutan center was set up in 1973 to help primates readjust to the wild after captivity or displacement through logging, land clearing or illegal capture. The are an estimated 6,600 orangutans living in pockets of Indonesia's Sumatra and Aceh provinces. (Photo by Robert Nickelsbeg/Getty Images)
BUKIT LAWANG, INDONESIA - JUNE 13: A female orangutan with a 4-month old baby walks near tourists after visiting a rainforest feeding station June 13, 2009 at Bukit Lawang, Sumatra, Indonesia. Bukit Lawang offers the public a rare glimpse of the endangered orangutans on the edge of the Gunung Leuser National Park. The orang-hutan, which is a Malay word for "person of the forest," often live up to 30-40 years in the wild. Bukit Lawang's orangutan center was set up in 1973 to help primates readjust to the wild after captivity or displacement through logging, land clearing or illegal capture. The are an estimated 6,600 orangutans living in pockets of Indonesia's Sumatra and Aceh provinces. (Photo by Robert Nickelsbeg/Getty Images)
Endangered Orangutans in Bukit Lawang Indonesia
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Credit:
Robert Nickelsberg / Contributor
Editorial #:
91565745
Collection:
Getty Images News
Date created:
June 13, 2009
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Source:
Getty Images AsiaPac
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Object name:
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