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Proboscis Monkey Appreciation Blog

@proboscismonkey / proboscismonkey.tumblr.com

Big nose of Borneo

Center for Great Apes calls for support after Hurricane Ian:

Thank you for all of your well wishes and positive pant hoots and long-calls!

We received a direct hit from Hurricane Ian. All of the apes and staff are safe, but the grounds will need significant clean up.

A few of the big oak trees, pines, and bamboo have come down along with some perimeter fences, but most of the damage is from flooding, limbs down, and debris.

The sanctuary does not have power, water, or phone service as of right now, but we have generators running a short time to give us water to clean.

While our apes are safe they are still stuck inside their nighthouses until the debris is cleared from their outdoor habitats.

We only have a skeleton staff crew since some of our staff can't get to us because of closed roads and flooding. However, the staff here have worked hard to clear paths and ape habitats.

We could really use your help with clean up. If you would like to donate, please use our website here:

Because we don't have power or phone service, our main office is closed. Please contact our Donor Programs Coordinator, Lauren at lauren@centerforgreatapes.org if you have questions that need immediate assistance.

Happy International Orangutan Day from the jungles of Borneo! Orangutans are more important than ever on this day - The big, charismatic apes are the face of conservation efforts for the entire mangrove and rainforest ecosystem of Borneo. Sadly, if they go, so too will the plants who rely on them as seed dispersers, an ecosystem of gut parasites (an important part of global biodiversity!), and potentially even our beloved Proboscis Monkey.

There is no one simple solution to conservation, but reducing global demand for palm oil is a small step that everyone can help take. Check out Products Without Palm Oil for a handy guide, but always remember the fight on the ground from activists in Malaysia and Indonesia, and the unfortunate history of colonialism and imperialism that has led to these economies relying on the non-native palm oil plantations to remain competitive in a global economy.

In one study, only 12 proboscis monkey mountings were recorded in a year, 17% of which were same-sex mountings. Juvenile proboscis monkeys will frequently go out of their way to prevent heterosexual copulation by climbing on the participants, pulling on the male’s nose, making noises, or making distracting movements.

Female proboscis monkeys often refuse heterosexual copulation, and have been observed alternating between same-sex and opposite-sex activities in one session. (x)

A proboscis monkey makes a daring leap into the river below

How to get so sopping wet in one simple step

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weedstoner

I havent stopped thinking about Him. please tell me hes okay

Don’t worry, proboscis monkeys regularly make jumps from Borneo’s treetops!

They’re capable of quickly climbing down from trees, but they just like to jump into rivers.

This post is making the rounds again, just a reminder the monkey is ok!

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dinodorks

Not our usual content but incredibly important!

For more information on the Batang Toru dam, the Tapanuli orangutan and how you can help, please check out the links below:

Please spread the world! The Tapanuli Orangutan is a precious species, and we can’t allow that naughty little face to cease to exist.

Orangutans are an umbrella species - they are the representatives of a habitat that contains countless other species. Among these species is the proboscis monkey. When we save the orangutan from extinction, we save the proboscis monkey, too.