Tanjung Puting National Park
Excerpts
from A Guidebook to Tanjung Puting National Park, Kalimantan Tengah
(Central Borneo), Indonesia, by Dr. Biruté M.F. Galdikas and
Dr. Gary L. Shapiro, published by PT Gramedia Putaka Utama and the
Orangutan Foundation International, 1994. © All Rights Reserved.
The book is currently out of print and unavailable.
Tanjung Puting is one of the
natural wonders of the world! You may not believe this after you
have been there only one day or two days or three days, but after the
fourth or fifth day something happens. You are captivated completely by
the purity of the air, the openness of the night sky with the most
remarkable view of the Milky Way, the magnificence and dignity of the
gentle orangutans, the thundering downpours that instantly cool the
air, and the clarity of the brilliant crimson sunsets. Tanjung Puting
is the largest and most diverse protected example of extensive coastal
tropical heath and peat swamp forest which used to cover much of
southern Borneo. The area was originally declared as a game reserve in
1935 and a National Park in 1982. While the Park has checkered history
of weak protection, nonetheless, it remains substantially wild and
natural.

Tanjung Puting is covered by a complex
mosaic of diverse lowland habitats. It contains 3,040 sq km2 of low
lying swampy terrain punctuated by blackwater rivers which flow into
the Java Sea. At the mouth of these rivers and along the sea coast are
found Nipa/mangrove swamps. Mangroves teem with animal life. Tanjung
Puting also includes tall dry ground tropical rain forest, primarily
tropical heath forest, with a canopy of 40 meters (120 feet) with
"emergents" exceeding 50 meters (150 ft) in height, seasonally
inundated peat swamp forest with peat in layers two meters deep, open
depression lakes formed by fire, and open areas of abandoned dry rice
fields now covered with elephant grass and ferns. The tropical heath
forest which is called "kerangas" in parts of Borneo, is only found on
very poor, typically white-sandy soils and is characterized by
medium-sized trees.
The best known animals in Tanjung
Puting are the orangutans, made famous through the efforts of Orangutan
Research and Conservation Program, which is based at the landmark Camp
Leakey research station. Tanjung Puting also boasts the bizarre looking
proboscis monkey with its "Jimmy Durante" nose as well as seven other
primate species. Clouded leopards, civets, and Malaysian sun bears
cavort in the park as do mouse deer, barking deer, sambar deer, and the
wild cattle known as banteng. Tanjung Puting hosts over 220 species of
birds, including hornbills, deep forest birds and many wetland species.
Tanjung Puting is well known for its "bird lakes, " seasonal rookeries
for a half a dozen species of endangered waterbirds, including the only
known Bornean nesting grounds for white egrets. Tanjung Puting also has
two species of crocodiles, dozens of snakes and frogs, numerous
threatened species, including the fortune-bringing and highly
endangered "dragon" fish also known as the Arwana (bony-tongue). Among
the most flamboyant of these animals are the many species of colorful
birds,butterflies, and moths found in the Park.
Tanjung Puting sits on a peninsula
that juts out into the Java Sea. The peninsula is low lying and swampy
with a spine of dry ground which rises a few feet above the omnipresent
swamp. Towards the north of Tanjung Puting is characterized by gentle
hills and gold-bearing alluvial plains. Maps of the region commonly
portray a ridge of mountains coming down into Tanjung Puting. This
ridge does not exist, in fact, nowhere does the altitude rise above 100
feet in Tanjung Puting.
Tanjung Puting is a veritable hothouse
of ecodiversity. The diverse habitat zones shelter slightly different
fauna and flora providing a great variety of microhabitats for plants
and animals and thus, the opportunity for many species to be present in
close proximity. In a Bornean context, tropical heath forest by itself
is not representative of the largest trees, the tallest canopy, or the
most diverse ecosystem.
Tropical swamp ecosystems are little
represented in protected areas throughout Southeast Asia but are
omnipresent in Tanjung Puting. In the peat swamp forest, many trees
have stilt roots or aerial roots as adaptations to frequent flooding.
Aside from its remarkable biological
attributes, Tanjung Puting is highly important for the well-being of
the surrounding local human population. The wetlands provide vital
ecological services such as flood control, stream control regulation,
erosion control, natural biological filtration system, and seasonal
nurseries for fish which are the major source of local animal protein.
Many of these services have an impact well beyond the local area. For
instance, the waters surrounding Tanjung Puting attract fishing vessels
from many different parts of Indonesia. In addition, local
peoplebenefit from a great variety of forest products including honey,
waxes, aromatic woods, fibers for ropes and cloth, medicinal plants,
fuel oils, thatching materials, rattan, firewood, incense, wild rubber,
edible latexes, resins, natural pesticides, fungicides and possible
virocides.
For the above reasons and many other
reasons not noted, Tanjung Puting is recognized as one of the most
important and outstanding provincial treasures in Kalimantan Tengah.
The national government has also made a strong commitment to protect
the forest, its wildlife and to manage the park wisely. Tanjung Puting
has increasingly gained international prestige and recognition. As a
result, more and more visitors from throughout the world are
experiencing a fresh new outlook on nature and an appreciation of the
tropical rain forest which was humankind's original "Garden of Eden."
The peat swamp and fresh water swamp
forest associations present in Tanjung Puting were at one time
extensive along the south coast of Borneo from Banjarmasin in the east
to the Kapuas River near Pontianak in the west. These swamps extended
up the northwest coast of Sarawak and Brunei and as far as the Klias
peninsula in Sabah. In Sarawak in general, peat swamp forests are very
well developed and they are still very important there as a natural
resource. In Kalimantan, however, much of the swamp habitat has been
converted, both permanently and on shifting cultivation basis, to rice
fields. Swamp habitats, as found in Tanjung Puting, are becoming more
difficult to find. Although Tanjung Puting has suffered some
encroachment from human activity, the Park area is still wild and
pristine. The vegetation supports a large population of animals, making
this one of the most important areas in Southeast Asia for the
preservation primates, birds, reptiles and fish.
|