Lone Drøscher Nielsen

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Lone Drøscher Nielsen
Born November 4, 1964
Residence Palangka Raya, Borneo
Nationality Danish
Fields Primatologist, Conservationist
Institutions Borneo Orangutan Survival
Known for Study and protection of orangutan, conservation, re-introduction to wild

Lone Drøscher Nielsen is a wildlife conservationist. She was born and grew up in Aalborg, Denmark. She encountered her first orangutan while volunteering as a fourteen-year-old at Aalborg zoo.[1][2] Later, when she was working as a flight attendant with a Scandinavian airline, Scandinavian Airlines,she volunteered for a month-long project on the Indonesian island of Borneo, and here she came into contact with orangutans again. She found she was able to cope with life without electricity or hot water deep in the jungle: "It was the forest I fell in love with at first. But my love for the orangutans soon followed."[1]

Drøscher Nielsen saw the plight of the Bornean orangutan, a highly intelligent primate, which shares almost 97% of its DNA with humans, and which is rapidly losing its natural habitat due to logging and oil palm plantations. In 1996, Lone moved permanently to Borneo to help save the orangutan from extinction.

Nyaru Menteng

Kevin, one of the young orangutans at Nyaru Menteng, takes a nap.

Drøscher Nielsen sought the advice of Dr Willie Smits of the Borneo Orangutan Survival (BOS) Foundation about the possibility of creating a new project in Central Kalimantan to deal with the swelling numbers of orphaned orangutans. Dr Smits agreed to help, and with the financial backing of the Gibbon Foundation and BOS Indonesia, Lone founded the Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Reintroduction Project in 1998.[3] She was able to build the facility under an agreement with the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry, and Nyaru Menteng officially opened its doors to the first dozen orangutans in 1999.

The sanctuary was designed to hold up to 100 orphaned orangutans while they go through rehabilitation. In addition to quarantine cages, medical clinic, and nursery, the sanctuary had a large area of forest in which orangutans could learn the skills needed to live in the wild.[4] Nyaru Menteng quickly became the largest primate rescue project in the world, with over 600 orphaned and displaced orangutans in its care in 2009[5] and a staff of 200.[6]

Many of these orangutans are only weeks old when they arrive, and all of them are psychologically traumatized.[7] The sanctuary not only saves the mostly orphaned baby orangutans from the local farmers and illegal pet-traders, but has developed a process for their gradual re-introduction to the remaining Borneo rainforest.

Babies and young orangutans brought to the centre are cared for 24 hours a day by a team of "babysitters". As they grow and learn they are then taken to "forest school" where they learn, still with staff present, to climb trees and survive in the forest. At the age of about eight years, they are relocated in groups of around 25 to a neighbouring island for the first stage in their release.[8][9]

At the present, Drøscher Nielsen lives near the Nyaru Menteng Rescue Center, Kalimantan, Borneo, managing a specialized clinic of veterinarians and paramedics as well as a workforce of local Indonesians who work as babysitters caring for the orphaned orangutans in the center. In 2010 she was forced to leave Borneo and returned to Europe due to a life-threatening illness but returned in late 2012.[10]

Television and film

Nyaru Menteng is featured on Animal Planet's award-winning series Orangutan Island, the BBC's Orangutan diary, Saving Planet Earth and Growing Up... Orangutan (BBC/Discovery Channel). Drøscher Nielsen starred in the 2008 Australian documentary-drama, The Burning Season.

Writing

In 2006 Drøscher Nielsen published From Forest Kindergarten to Freedom with Pia Lykke Bertelsen in English, German and Danish.[11] The book is a photographic story that follows two baby orangutans, Emma and Emil, growing up in the rehabilitation centre and eventually being released into the wild, with photos by Humphrey Watchman, Steve Leonard, Sam Gracey, Lone Drøscher Nielsen and Danielle Brandt.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Michelle Desilets; photography Christian Åslund (May 2008). "Single Mother". Scanorama Magazine (Scandinavian Airlines). pp. 44–49. Retrieved 1 April 2010. "I must admit, some days I feel disillusioned. I think 'my goodness, if we can't save a species as noble and magnificent as an orangutan what hope is there for the planet?'" 
  2. Thompson, Shawn (2010). The Intimate Ape: Orangutans and the Secret Life of a Vanishing Species. Citadel Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-8065-3133-5. 
  3. "The Organisation". Orangutan Land Trust. Retrieved 31 March 2010. 
  4. The Nyaru Menteng Sanctuary. "Save the Orangutan". Retrieved 31 March 2010. 
  5. Drøscher Nielsen, Lone (1 May 2009). "The destruction of the rainforests amounts to orangutan genocide". The Independent. Retrieved 9 May 2010. 
  6. Andrew Higgins (27 November 2009). "Into the wild, once again". Boston Globe. Retrieved 9 May 2010. 
  7. Richard Zimmerman (5 March 2009). "Orangutans and palm oil: What's the connection?". TED Blog. Retrieved 31 March 2010. 
  8. Orangutan Diaries - Series 1 (DVD). Borneo: BBC. 9 July 2007. OCLC B000R343IU. 
  9. Orangutan Diaries: Series 2 (DVD). Borneo: BBC. 6 April 2009. OCLC B001UHNXQK. 
  10. http://www.opf.org/?p=1218
  11. Drøscher Nielsen, Lone; Pia Lykke Bertelsen (2006). From Forest Kindergarten to Freedom. PLB Network. ISBN 87-92059-00-7. Retrieved 1 April 2010. 

External links

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