The Tapanuli Orangutan, Pongo tapanuliensis, is thought to have moved significantly closer to extinction after Cyclone Senyar passed across Sumatra on 25 November 2025. The species, which was only discovered in 2017, is considered to be the world's rarest Ape, with a population of about 800 all living within an area of less than 1000 km² in North Sumatra. It is considered to be Critically Endangered under the terms of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species.
Cyclone Senyar caused more than 1000 mm of rain to fall in a day in parts of North Sumatra, triggering a series of catastrophic floods and landslides which killed over a thousand people on the island. The three districts where the species is found, North, Central, and South Tapanuli, have been particularly badly hit, with satellite images showing that between 48 and 72 km² of the forest inhabited by Tapanuli Orangutans has been destroyed, according to Erik Meijaard of Borneo Futures, who has been studying the storm's impact on the Apes. This could potentially equate to between 33 and 55 Orangutans, or between 6.2% and 10.5% of the total population.
So far, only a single dead Orangutan has been found, leading to the possibility that the Apes may have been able to escape the area before the worst of the event, although this is not typical Orangutan behaviour; they usually seek the nearest shelter and attempt to wait out large storms. Even should this have been the case, the storm appears to have destroyed large areas of their native habitat, including food sources, which makes it likely that more Orangutans will be lost in the near future.
The population was already considered to be threatened by the expansion of mining, hydropower projects and palm oil plantations, within their habitat, as well as a rapidly changing environment, with global warning already having led to an increase in rainfall of between 28 and 160% across Sumatra. One possible benefit to the Orangutans is that the Indonesian government has ordered a halt to all new development projects in the Tapanuli area, pending a survey of the region, which may lead to their gaining some extra long-term protection. The government has also indicated its support for forest restoration projects in the region, which could lead to an increase in the available habitat for the Apes.
The storm is also reported to have completely destroyed the Ketambe Research Station, within the Gunung Leuser National Park in Aceh Province, which was the first specialist Orangutan research centre in the world, opened in 1971 by Dutch primatologist Herman Rijksen, and a leading centre for research into the Sumatran Orangutan, Pongo abelii, which is also considered to be Critically Endangered.
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