Samboja Lestari

In 2001, BOS Indonesia, led by BOS founder Dr Willie Smits, started purchasing land near Wanariset. 

The 2000 ha area it acquired had been deforested and was covered in alang-alang grass.

The aim was to restore the rainforest and provide a safe haven for rehabilitated orangutans while at the same time providing a source of income for local people.

The name of this reserve is the "Samboja Lestari Project", roughly translated as the "everlasting conservation project of the Samboja district".

The reserve is divided into three zones:

  • The outer zone consisting of a 100 metre wide ring planted with sugar palm providing income to up to 600 local families and protecting the central area from fire;
  • The middle zone which is being reforested with a wide variety of local rainforest trees to provide a permanent wildlife sanctuary;
  • An inner zone of about 300 ha with various facilities including smaller forest sanctuaries for specific animals unable to be released as well as the nursery, arboretum and environmental educational facilities.

Since 2001, the land has been planted with more than a million trees  covering more than 1000 different species. 

The alang alang grass was killed as it was shaded out with fast-growing acacia trees which could then be harvested and used in construction.

With the growth in the forest, the density and diversity of wildlife returned. So far 137 bird species and nine primate species have been recorded.

Air temperature has fallen by 3 to 5 degrees centigrade, cloud cover increased by 12% and rainfall by 20-25% with the forest cooling the atmosphere and attracting rain clouds.

Orangutans & Sunbears

The Orangutan Reintroduction Project at Wanariset has moved to Samboja Lestari with around 200 orangutans now living there.

Several Forest Schools provide natural, educational playgrounds for the orangutans in which to learn forest skills before returning to cages to sleep at night.

A new Clinic and Quarantine area has been established as well as many new forest cages for larger orangutans and a Babies' Room for the little ones.

Six orangutan islands have been created to accommodate orangutans suffering chronic hepatitis B or other disabilities which prevent them from ever being released into the wild.

Samboja Lestari is also the home to 52 sun bears. To read more about the sun bear sanctuary, click here.

Benefits to the community

The local people are gaining both financially and environmentally.

They receive income from the sale of the land, from salaries working in the rehabilitation area, from money made by selling the fruits and vegetables grown in between the planted trees, money from the sugar palm activities and from the salary they receive every month for protecting the area.

However they also benefit through less fire hazards, improved health conditions, the creation of local industries, year-round supply of better water for irrigated rice fields and less flooding or severe water supply problems during wet and dry seasons.

"In this way the people are given an alternative and so they do not need to destroy the forest any more. This means you can show the world that nature and people can live together and do not need to exclude one another" according to Dr Willie Smits Founder of BOS.


Samboja Lodge

Purchase rainforest

 
Latest BOS News and Information
Why we are failing orangutans

10 March 2010
It is no secret that orangutans are threatened with extinction because their rain forests are being destroyed at an alarming rate. Ten years ago, Shawn Thompson, a writer, former journalist and university professor, set out to chronicle the threat to orangutans in a book released in March 2010. Read Article »

 
 
Decoding the long calls of the orangutan

10 March 2010
Research into the long calls of male Orangutans in Borneo has given scientists new insight into how these solitary apes communicate through dense jungle. Read Article »

 
 
"Environmentally-friendly" biofuels cause more harm

2 March 2010
'Environmentally-friendly' biofuels have been found to be more harmful to the planet than normal fossil fuel. Read Article »

 
 
Unilever drops major palm-oil producer

22 February 2010
BBC documentary shows Indonesian company clearing protected rainforest.

Read Article »

 
 
Red alert: conservationists name 25 primates most at risk

18 February 2010
Gorillas, orang-utans and a cyanide-eating lemur are among the world’s 25 most critically endangered primates, scientists have said. Read Article »

 
 
Palm oil plantations are now 'forests,' says EU

5 February 2010
The European Commission and some EU member states hope to redefine palm oil plantations as "forests," according to a leaked document from the EU executive. Read Article »

 
 
Campaign to save tropical forests failed by food giants

26 January 2010
Project to create sustainable palm oil project undermined by Western firms

Read Article »

 
 
Good governance vital to success of REDD

25 January 2010
Payments to developing countries to reduce emissions from deforestation will only succeed if corruption and lack of financial management capacity are addressed, says new report. Read Article »

BOS Newsletter
Keep up with the latest from BOS Australia.
First Name:
State:
Email: