Orangutan Care Centre and Quarantine (OCCQ) to successful rehabilitation.
Category: Lamandau River Wildlife Reserve, Orangutan Care Centre & Quarantine, Orangutans, Rehabilitation | Date: Nov 29 2007 | By: admin
I want to introduce you to the OCCQ because behind the need to save the forests, is the need to save the orphaned orangutans who ultimately all come from the forests which have been lost. Increasing numbers of orangutans are arriving at the OCCQ as their habitat is destroyed. The OCCQ currently has over 300 orangutans and we urgently need to release the older orangutans back to the wild, where they belong. To date 155 orangutans have been released in the Lamandau Wildlife Reserve, most of who have come from the OCCQ.

Very young orphan orangutan with carer
Orangutan Care Centre and Quarantine facility
Inside the Lamandau Wildlife Reserve, we operate five release-camps each with a staff of up to seven field assistants. OF plans to build two more release camps at Lamandau to relieve pressure at the OCCQ. One of the camps will be constructed by participants from our invaluable Volunteer Programme and we are currently trying to raise funds for the construction of the other site and both release camps’ running costs.
The release of orangutans into the Lamandau creates a visible reason to increase the protection of threatened forests. Last August we managed to stop the establishment of an 8,000 ha oil-palm plantation that would have wiped out the reserve’s buffer zone and impacted heavily on the nearby Lamandau River.

5 Responses to “Orangutan Care Centre and Quarantine (OCCQ) to successful rehabilitation.”
Wanda, Atlanta, on 29 Nov 2007
Everyday a baby is gotten means there is less forest for them - but it is good to hear that some plantations are being stopped because if not the outcome is the saddest of all for our beloved Organg’s!!
sheryl, washington dc, on 29 Nov 2007
What a beautiful baby. I’m so sorry she’s lost her mother and family. I hope by the time she’s old enough to rejoin her friends on a reserve that things are changing for the better in Indonesia and Borneo.
s.
THERESA SISKIND, on 06 Dec 2007
So precious, that little baby. I’m making a donation today to help save these beautiful, playful, and curious “cousins” of ours. Someday, when she’s ready she will be with others of her kind, the way nature intended.
Orangutan Foundation » Blog Archive » Volunteer programme, on 10 Dec 2007
[…] rest days were spent in PKB and during this time we visited the OCCQ. The OCCQ really brings home the importance of building the guard posts and release camps in […]
maddy, on 14 Aug 2008
Im only 13 and I want to grow up to be a primatoligist and work with orangutans. but I cant do that if there exstinc by the time im old enough to work with them.
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