Conservation: CITES – Appendix I and U. S. ESA as included in P. pygmaeus; IUCN – Critically Endangered.
Sumber: Order Primates
Family Hominidae · Order Primates
Data diperbarui secara berkala dari berbagai sumber observasi biodiversitas.

Foto: Russell A. Mittermeier;Anthony B. Rylands;Don E. Wilson
Otoritas penamaan: Lesson, 1827 (1827)
Status taksonomi: ACCEPTED
Status konservasi (IUCN): CR Kritis
Dipublikasikan dalam: Man. Mamm. p.32
Total Catatan di Indonesia
0
Provinsi Ditemukan
0
dari 38 provinsi
Catatan Pertama
0
tahun pertama tercatat
Tren Tahunan
-0%
-80.7% vs 2025
Orang Utan Sumatera (Pongo abelii) termasuk dalam famili Hominidae, ordo Primates, kelas Mammalia. Berdasarkan data yang terhimpun, spesies ini telah tercatat sebanyak 748 kali di Indonesia, tersebar di 5 provinsi. Catatan pertama tercatat pada tahun 1882.
Sumatera Utara merupakan provinsi dengan catatan observasi terbanyak untuk spesies ini, dengan 291 catatan (38.9% dari total). Data distribusi ini mencerminkan akumulasi dari berbagai kegiatan survei, penelitian, dan kontribusi citizen science. Pola distribusi yang tercatat mungkin tidak sepenuhnya menggambarkan persebaran alami spesies, karena dipengaruhi oleh intensitas pengamatan di masing-masing wilayah.
Tren observasi tahunan Pongo abelii menunjukkan penurunan signifikan (-81%) pada periode terakhir dibanding tahun sebelumnya, dengan catatan pertama pada tahun 1882.
Catatan deskriptif tentang Pongo abelii dari sumber literatur primer (via GBIF).
Conservation: CITES – Appendix I and U. S. ESA as included in P. pygmaeus; IUCN – Critically Endangered.
Sumber: Order Primates
Distribution: Sumatra, NW of Lake Toba (Indonesia).
Sumber: Order Primates
Habitat. Primary lowland rainforest, swamp forest, and montane forest up to 1500 m above sea level, although elevations below 500 m are preferred. Densities of Sumatran Orangutans plummet by up to 60 % with even low-intensity logging. Sumatran forests are highly productive due to Sumatra’s rich volcanic soils. Mast fruiting events occur, but fluctuations in food availability are less dramatic than on Borneo. These ecological conditions contribute to differences in behavior and life history between Sumatran and Bornean orangutans.
Sumber: Hominidae
Movements, Home range and Social organization. Male and female Sumatran Orangutans live in home ranges with considerable overlap. Males travel more widely than females, over vast areas of forest, but the true extent of their home range size remains a mystery. Nevertheless, it has been inferred that males’ home ranges are several times larger than those of females. Flanged males advertise their location to females and other males by regularly emitting “ long calls. ” Males are generally solitary, females travel with their offspring, and adolescents of both sexes may form small groupsas they become increasingly independent oftheir mothers. Adult female Sumatran Orangutans in high-density populations in peat swamp regularly travel together for several days at a time. Average adult female feeding party size is 1 - 5 - 2 individuals, but up to 14 individuals have been observed feeding in the same large fruiting tree. The greater productivity of Sumatran forests allows Sumatran Orangutans to maintain a stable fruit diet, occupy large home ranges, and be more social than Bornean Orangutans. Sumatran Orangutans show cognitively complex and innovative behavior, including tool use, and have a larger repertoire of cultural behaviors than do Bornean Orangutans. In swamp forest, Sumatran Orangutans regularly make and use tools to eat honey or seeds of the fruits of the “ cemengang ” (Neesia, Malvaceae). High densities of Sumatran Orangutans in peat swamp forests (as many as 8 ind / km?) seem to provide more opportunities for social learning. Sumatran Orangutans have a slightly larger average brain size than Bornean Orangutans, which may be related to their greater sociality and more frugivorous diet.
Sumber: Hominidae
Status and Conservation. CITES Appendix I. Classified as Critically Endangered on The IUCN Red List. The Sumatran Orangutan is seriously threatened by logging (both legal and illegal), wholesale conversion of forest to agricultural land, especially oil palm plantations, and habitat fragmentation by road construction. Individuals are also hunted and kept illegally as pets, usually as a by-product of habitat conversion and conflict with farmers at the forest edge, which results in many orangutans being killed as pests. In the Batang Toru region, Sumatran Orangutans are still hunted in the forest. Increasing fragmentation may soon result in further subdivisions of the remaining populations. In some areas, the rate of loss during the 1990 s was ¢. 1000 orangutans / year, and the total population of Sumatran Orangutans is thought to have declined by more than 50 % prior to 2000. In 2006, the total population remaining was estimated at 3500 - 12,000 individuals. A major stronghold is the 26,000 km * Leuser Ecosystem Conservation Area, which supports ¢. 75 % of the remaining Sumatran Orangutans and has the highest density populations in peat swamp forests on the western coast. It was created by a Presidential decree in 1998 that does not exclude non-forest uses but stresses the importance of sustainable management with conservation of natural resources as the primary goal. Also within the Leuser Ecosystem is the 9000 km * Gunung Leuser National Park, a mountainous area that supports ¢. 25 % of the remaining Sumatran Orangutans. Gunung Leuseris also a Man and Biosphere Reserve and part of the Tropical Rainforest Heritage of the Sumatra World Heritage Cluster Site. There are no other notable large conservation areas with Sumatran Orangutans outside the Leuser Ecosystem, but there is one more potentially viable population (c. 600 individuals) in the Batang Toru forests, southwest of Lake Toba in North Sumatra. Efforts are underway to obtain protected status for this area, which is currently slated as a timber concession. Although Sumatran Orangutans themselves are strictly protected under Indonesian law, better legal protection of large areas of primary lowland forest is needed to secure their long-term future. A few small fragments of forest outside of the main blocks may still contain small numbers of Sumatran Orangutans, but these are not considered viable in the long term.
Sumber: Hominidae
Descriptive notes. Head-body 94 - 99 cm (males) and 68 - 84 cm (females); weight 60 - 85 kg (flanged males), 30 - 65 kg (unflanged males), and 30 - 45 kg (females). The Sumatran Orangutan displays extreme sexual dimorphism. Males continue to get heavier as they get older and can reach 100 kg. Sumatran Orangutans are generally slightly slimmer and more linear in build than Bornean Orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus), and they have longer, paler, dense, and fleecy cinnamon-colored hair. Adult males have a pronounced luxuriant beard and mustache, and flanges that lie flat against the face and are thickly covered with fine white hairs, giving a wide appearance. Adult female Sumatran Orangutans also have well-developed beards.
Sumber: Hominidae
Nama-nama ilmiah lain yang pernah digunakan untuk Pongo abelii dalam literatur taksonomi.
| Nama Sinonim | Otoritas | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Pithecus satyrus abelii | (Lesson, 1827) | SYNONYM |
| Pithecus satyrus abongensis | Selenka, 1896 | SYNONYM |
| Pithecus satyrus deliensis | Selenka, 1896 | SYNONYM |
| Pithecus satyrus langkatensis | Selenka, 1896 | SYNONYM |
| Simia abelii | (Lesson, 1827) | SYNONYM |
| Simia gigantica | Pearson, 1841 | SYNONYM |
| Simia satyrus abelii | (Lesson, 1827) | SYNONYM |
| # | Provinsi | Catatan | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sumatera Utara | 291 | 38.9% |
| 2 | Aceh | 285 | 38.1% |
| 3 | Riau | 2 | 0.3% |
| 4 | Sumatera Barat | 1 | 0.1% |
| 5 | Jambi | 1 | 0.1% |
Jumlah catatan observasi Pongo abelii di Indonesia per tahun
Pongo abelii
Foto: Russell A. Mittermeier;Anthony B. Rylands;Don E. Wilson
Pongo abelii
Foto: Russell A. Mittermeier;Anthony B. Rylands;Don E. Wilson
Pongo abelii
Foto: Jackson, Stephen M.;Jansen, Justin J. F. J.;Baglione, Gabrielle;Callou, Cécile
| Nama | Bahasa | Sumber |
|---|---|---|
| Orang Utan Sumatera | Indonesia | Catalogue of Life |
| Orang-outan de Sumatra | Prancis | Catalogue of Life |
| Orango di Sumatra | Italia | Catalogue of Life |
| Orangotango-de-sumatra | Portugis | Catalogue of Life |
| Orangutan Sumatra | Indonesia | Catalogue of Life |
| Orangutan de Sumatra | - | Hominidae |
| Orangutan de Sumatra | Spanyol | Catalogue of Life |
| Orangutan sumatrzański | pol | Catalogue of Life |
| Orangután de Sumatra | Spanyol | Catalogue of Life |
| Sumatra Orangutanı | tur | Catalogue of Life |
| Sumatra orangutan | est | Catalogue of Life |
| Sumatra-Orang Utan | Jerman | Catalogue of Life |
| Sumatra-Orang-Utan | Jerman | Hominidae |
| Sumatra-orangutang | dan | Catalogue of Life |
| Sumatraanse Orang-oetan | Belanda | Catalogue of Life |
| Sumatran Orangutan | Inggris | Catalogue of Life |
| Sumatran orangutan | Inggris | The Paleobiology Database |
| Sumatraorangutang | nob | Catalogue of Life |
| orangutan sumaterský | ces | Catalogue of Life |
| szumátrai orangután | hun | Catalogue of Life |
Berdasarkan data 748 observasi, Sumatera Utara adalah provinsi dengan catatan Orang Utan Sumatera (Pongo abelii) terbanyak — 291 observasi (38.9% dari total catatan di Indonesia). Spesies ini tersebar di 5 provinsi.
Catatan pertama Orang Utan Sumatera (Pongo abelii) di Indonesia tercatat pada tahun 1882. Hingga kini terdapat 748 catatan dari 5 provinsi, yang dihimpun dari survei lapangan, koleksi museum, dan platform citizen science.
Menurut IUCN Red List, Orang Utan Sumatera (Pongo abelii) berstatus "Kritis" (kode CR). Status ini mencerminkan tingkat risiko kepunahan global spesies, bukan khusus Indonesia.
Di Indonesia dan Malaysia, Pongo abelii dikenal dengan beberapa nama lokal: Orang Utan Sumatera, Orangutan Sumatra. Penamaan dapat berbeda antardaerah dan bahasa.
Ya, Pongo abelii memiliki 7 nama sinonim ilmiah, di antaranya: Pithecus satyrus abelii, Pithecus satyrus abongensis, Pithecus satyrus deliensis. Nama sinonim adalah nama-nama lain yang pernah digunakan untuk spesies yang sama dalam literatur taksonomi.
Pongo abelii diklasifikasikan sebagai berikut: Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Chordata, Class Mammalia, Order Primates, Family Hominidae, Genus Pongo. Spesies ini dideskripsikan oleh Lesson, 1827.
150 titik observasi Pongo abelii di Indonesia
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