Orangutans & Conservation Approaches Part II, Michelle Desilets
Michelle Desilets, Executive Director of the Orangutan Land Trust, discusses the rehabilitation of rescued orangutans and new approaches to help save this species in the second of a two-part interview. She tells “The WildLife” host Laurel Neme how a rescued orangutan learns to be wild with mesmerizing stories of the "school" at Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Reintroduction Project in Kalimantan, Indonesia. She also explores innvoative ways to help protect orangutans and their habitat. Michelle Desilets has been working on orangutan conservation alongside Lone Droscher Nielsen, the internationally well-known champion of these apes, for over 15 years. Together, the two women founded the Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Reintroduction Project which now has over 600 orangutans in its care, making it the largest such center in the world. Michelle also founded the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation UK (BOS) and served as its Executive Director and initiated a number of international campaigns to help orangutans, such as campaigns to end the illegal trade of orangutans and to repatriate known smuggled orangutans, as well as the campaign for sustainable palm oil. Currently, she is the Executive Director of the Orangutan Land Trust. She also sits on several working groups in the Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil and spends a good deal of time at the Nyaru Menteng project. (First aired on April 12, 2010)
You can download this and other episodes at Podbean or at iTunes.
Podcast Subjects:
Elephants Rhinos Orangutans and Palm Oil Other Primates Big Cats Bears Other Mammals Insects Birds Reptiles and Amphibians Marine Life Climate Change Poaching Poisons Wildlife Trade Wildlife Forensics Wildlife Research Working Dogs Wildlife and Health Wildlife Rehabilitation Economics and Wildlife Wildlife Law Enforcement Wildlife Filmmaking Journalism and Wildlife CITES Asia, Southeast Asia, and Middle East Latin America North American Wildlife Activism Veterinarian Stories Podcasts by Subject