Also known as Pongo pygmaeus
species of orangutan
The Bornean orangutan is a species of great ape found on the island of Borneo that shares about 97% of its DNA with humans. It is critically endangered due to habitat loss from deforestation, making it an important focus for conservation efforts worldwide.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Bornean Orangutan
species
婆羅洲猩猩(学名:Pongo pygmaeus)是原生于婆羅洲的红猩猩。牠们与体型较小的蘇門達臘猩猩是亞洲仅有的两种類人猿。像其他大猿一样,猩猩非常聰明,野生猩猩会使用工具和并拥有獨特的文化。猩猩與人类拥有96.4%的共同DNA。 野生婆羅洲猩猩的壽命可以達35-40歲;飼養的可以活到60歲。
via IUCN
The Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) is an orangutan species endemic to the island of Borneo. It belongs to the only genus of great apes native to Asia and is the largest of the three Pongo species. It has a coarse, reddish coat and up to 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) long arms. It is sexually dimorphic — males are larger than females and develop large cheek pads (flanges).
The Bornean orangutan inhabits Borneo lowland rain forests and Borneo montane rain forests up to an elevation of 1,500 m (4,900 ft). Its diet includes fruits, seeds, flowers, bird eggs, sap and vines. It is highly intelligent, displaying tool use and distinct cultural patterns. It is listed as Critically Endangered, with deforestation, palm oil plantations, and hunting posing a serious threat to its survival.
via PubMed
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).