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P. Rouxel

ENCLOSURES FOR SUN BEARS AT SAMBOJA LESTARI

Work for this new project began on October 24th 2016 and despite the daily rains, we have made good progress. One team is dismantling old 1,25 m2 holding cages that we will later reassemble into 9 m2 holding cages for the new forest enclosures. Another team is making the foundation for the future fence of the small enclosure and placing the posts that will support the harmonica mesh and electric fencing. And a third team is making the foundation of the cement flooring on which 3 new holding cages will be placed.

I’m happy that after just one week, the project is well under way and looking good. Thank you for your support.

Patrick Rouxel

02-dismantling-old-cages04-small-enclsoure-foundation

09-foundation-holding-cages

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

October Update

I’m happy to inform you that we will soon be beginning the construction of the 4 Ha forest enclosure for the sun bears at BOSF Samboja Lestari in Indonesia. I will be on site from October 17th onwards and will begin construction work right away.

Of the estimated 62 000 euros needed to complete the project, I have so far raised about 25 000 €, so I have enough to begin work but I still need to raise another 37 000 €. This is where your help is precious. Any small amount is greatly appreciated because in the end it all adds up and your contribution will, in affect, enable the completion of the project.

On this note, I would life to thank all students and teachers at the United World College of Singapore (picture above) who recently did a fundraising event for this project and managed to raise 2000 €.

Thank you for your support.

IMPROVING THE WELFARE OF CAPTIVE SUN BEARS

We build large forest enclosures for the bears, we renovate and improve the existing facilities and we train the local staff to animal welfare. To this date, we have helped improve the living conditions of more than 100 sun bears across Indonesia. Some bears have gone from living alone in a 1 square meter cage, to living with other bears in several thousand square metres of forest.

Apang before in 1 sq meter

Apang after (with Kumala in 6000 m2)

Apang after (with Kumala in 6000 m2)

Sun bears are very active animals, genetically made to cover large distances, to climb trees, to forage, to dig, to play and fight. They do not hibernate, they sleep no more than 6 to 8 hours a day and have a lot of energy to spend. They are solitary in the wild but if they are friends with another bear they love to play. Sun bears have a fundamental need for large tropical rainforests, they are a highly developed and noble species of the wilderness. When they are locked up alone in a cage and deprived of everything, they are overwhelmed with frustration and stress. It is a daily torture for a sun bear to be confined to a small space.

Kecil after (with 5 other bears in 16500 m2)

Kecil after (with 5 other bears in 16500 m2)

Kecil before in 9 m2

Kecil before in 9 m2

Most captive sun bears in Indonesia are adult bears who cannot go back to the wild because they are too habituated to humans and because they don’t have the skills to survive in the wild. Unfortunately, many of these sun bears are kept in cages because the organisations caring for them do not have the means to provide them with better living conditions.

 

 

Petung before (alone in 4 m2)

Petung before (alone in a 4 m2 cage)

Petung after (with a female bear in 6700 m2)

Petung after (with Windi in 6700 m2)

At Sun Bear Outreach, we believe that sun bears who cannot go back to the wild deserve the best possible captive life we can give them. Since 2014, we have been collaborating with the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOSF), the Orangutan Foundation International (OFI), the Wildlife Rescue Centre of Yogjakarta (WRC) and with the Cikananga Wildlife Centre (CWC) in Java to improve the wellbeing of the bears in their care: we build large forest enclosures for the bears, improve the existing facilities, allow the bears to enjoy a social life with other bears and train the staff to better care for the them.

Jojo before (alone in a 1 m2 cage)

Jojo after (with 3 females in 9500 m2)

Jojo after (with 3 females in 9500 m2)

 

For the latest update check our projects for 2024

 

 

Raising awareness on the preservation of wildlife and its habitat

After the screening of "Life is One" at UWC in Singapore

After the screening of “Life is One” at UWC in Singapore

In addition to our actions in Indonesia to improve the well-being of captive animals, we work at raising awareness, locally and internationally, on wildlife conservation and preservation of the environment, in particular that of the tropical rainforest.

We intervene in schools in France, Indonesia and Singapore. We screen films like Tears of Wood, Green or Life is One (directed by Patrick Rouxel, founder of Sun Bear Outreach). Sometimes we show short films on the work we do in Indonesia. We try to inspire the students by what we do and trigger them to take action.

Screening of "Beruang Madu" at the KWLPH in Indonesia

Screening of “Beruang Madu” at the KWLPH in Indonesia

In collaboration with Dr Gabriella Fredriksson who runs the educational centre called Kawasan Wisata Pendidikan Lingkungan Hidup (KWLPH) next to the city of Balikpapan in East Kalimantan Indonesia, we made a film called Beruang Madu (Honey Bear) specially done for the Indonesian public. Beruang Madu is screened several times a week at KWLPH and seen by more than 1000 children a month.

Christy  up in a tree at Samboja Lestari, Indonesia

Christy up in a tree at Samboja Lestari, Indonesia

Also, thanks to the large forest enclosures we build in the sanctuaries, the visitors can now observe the sun bears in their natural habitat rather than in a cage. They are generally very happy to see the bears climb trees or appear from the undergrowth and come close to the fence to disappear again in the forest. Observation of the sun bears in the forest enclosures allows the visitors to see with their own eyes how well the bears blend in the rainforest and thus how important it is to preserve it.

 

REINTRODUCING SUN BEAR CUBS TO THE WILD

Between August 2011 and September 2014, Patrick Rouxel, founder of Sun Bear Outreach, followed the rehabilitation to life in the wild of 3 orphan sun bear cubs. Then in 2014/2015, he helped coordinate the rehabilitation of another 3 cubs. These were carried out in the National Park of Tanjung Puting, Central Kalimantan, Indonesia with the collaboration of the Orangutan Foundation International (OFI).

All the cubs were brought to the forest and released in a soft and gradual way commonly known as the ‘walk-release method’ established by Dr Gabriella Fredriksson, co-chair of the IUCN Sun Bear expert team. In the wild, cubs follow their mother until they are about 2 years old and which point they become independent and go off to establish their own territories. With Gabriella’s method, a person takes over the roll of the mother bear and stays in the forest with the cub until he becomes autonomous.

Bunbun at peace in the forest

Bunbun at peace in the forest

A camp in the forest serves as base for both the carer and the cub. Every day, from dawn to dusk, the foster parent and the cub wonder in the forest. The cub, driven by hunger and a natural curiosity, will learn to forage for food and climb trees on his own. The simple presence of the a foster parent is enough to chase away any wild bear who could want to harm the cub, or a clouded leopard who could potentially prey on a sun bear cub. In the late afternoon, the foster parent and the cub return to camp where the cub is given supplementary food and locked in a den for the night (away from camp) until the next morning, when a new day of exploring and learning begins. And so on, day after day.

Bunbun exploring the forest

Bunbun exploring the forest

The first cub Patrick brought back to the forest was called Bunbun. She was about one year old when the reintroduction began. She had kept her instinctive fear of humans, which was a good thing and she quickly began going away on her own and disappearing for a day or two before showing up at camp again. Unfortunately, after just 3 months, she got in a fight (probably with another bear) and came back to camp with a broken leg. She was taken back to the OFI clinic where she received treatment and was kept in a small cage for 10 weeks, to allow the bone to heal. Then we brought her back to the forest, but she managed to escape from her transport cage upon arrival at the camp and she ran into the forest never to be seen again.

Six months later, Patrick brought two other cubs to the forest, Bernie and Wawang, who had also been taken captive at a young age from the wild, then confiscated by the local authorities and handed over to the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOSF). To avoid losing the cubs in the forest like we had lost Bunbun, they were equipped with emitters placed in the abdominal cavity. This implant emits a radio wave that can be picked up by a receiver at a distance of approximately 300 m for about 3 years.

Bernie and Wawang in the forest

Bernie and Wawang in the forest

Unfortunately, after just 6 weeks, Bernie and Wawang ran off one late afternoon, beyond the limit of their tracking device, and spent their first night alone in the forest. The next morning, Wawang’s body was found, lifeless and covered in wounds from what looked like a fight with another bear. But Bernie was alive and she ended spending about 1 year and a half with Patrick in the forest, as she grew older and increasingly autonomous. We hope that she is still out there thriving as a free bear in her natural habitat.

Wawang in the forest

Wawang in the forest

After Bernie left to lead her own life, Patrick began the construction of a one hectare forest enclosure for 3 adult bears who could not go back to the wild, at the Care Centre of the Orangutan Foundation International (OFI). While doing this he participated in the coordination of the release of another 3 cubs: Ori, who sadly was brought back to the OFI Care Centre after 3 months in the forest because his carer abandoned the project, then Koko and Octa who unfortunately disappeared in the forest although they were still not fully autonomous. Despite the tracking devices, Koko and Octa they were never to be found again.

Since, Sun Bear Outreach has not participated in any other reintroductions of cubs to the wild, because we have focused our attention on building large forest enclosures for captive sun bears who cannot go back to the forest. But if the opportunity to release more sun bears to the wild presented itself and if the conditions were favourable, we would certainly try again, because despite the difficulty of the task, we believe that an attempt to a life in the wild is still better than a long life of captivity.

Bernie and Patrick in the forest

Bernie and Patrick in the forest