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The endangered proboscis monkey of Borneo needs large protected areas of forest to survive and thrive.
Enlarge imageWhen the bulldozers and chainsaws move into the forest, the damage is staggering. Scientific studies show that the industrial loggers in Papua New Guinea destroy 17 trees for every one that is felled and removed.
The Kikori Basin is one area being logged by Turama Forest Industries, a company of the Rimbunan Hijau group. The Basin is also home to some of the world's most unique species of animal and plant life.
Read more about this incredible biodiversity “hotspot” which faces threats from logging
Species facing extinction include:
By 2054, experts predict there will be just 234 wild Sumatran orang-utans left. If logging and orang-utan hunting were stopped today, that population would increase to 6570 orang-utans by 2054 (1).
(1) IUCN, Conservation Breeding Specialist Group, Orangutan Population and Habitat Viability Assessment 2004 (PDF, 7.4mb).