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For the first time, a Sumatran orangutan has been filmed using a canopy bridge to cross a road in North Sumatra, Indonesia. This bridge, built by conservationists, helps mitigate the barrier created by the road for wildlife.
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The critically endangered Sumatran orangutan has been filmed for the first time using a canopy bridge to cross a road.
In 2024, conservationists in the Pakpak Bharat district of North Sumatra in Indonesia built the bridge high over the Lagan-Pagindar road, which provides an essential route for local people but which became a barrier for animals.
Natural crossing was “impossible for wildlife”, said Erwin Alamsyah Siregar, director of Tangguh Hutan Khatulistiwa (TaHuKah), the environmental organisation that helped install the bridge.
For two years, the Sumatran Orangutan Society (SOS) and TaHuKah, its local partner, had been watching camera-trap footage of the bridge, waiting for the day that an orangutan would finally cross.
“You should have heard the cries of delight from the team,” said Helen Buckland, chief executive of SOS. “After two long years, it’s finally happened.”
This is the first time the species has been caught on camera crossing a wildlife bridge, offering a glimmer of hope to conservationists worried that this population would become functionally extinct if it were sequestered in one part of the forest.
For the 350 orangutans in the area, the road spelled disaster, as it split them into two populations, one at the Siranggas wildlife reserve, the other at the Sikulaping protection forest.
“Orangutans have a very slow life history, and are really prone to genetic bottlenecks,” said Buckland. If they are kept in small groups, they will be weakened by inbreeding until they are functionally extinct: surviving for now but heading towards long-term extinction.
After building the bridge with the help of the local government, a few different species began to use it: black giant squirrels, long-tailed macaques, agile gibbons – but no orangutans.

The canopy bridge that allows animals to cross the Lagan-Pagindar road. Photograph: Juang Solala Laiya/Courtesy of Sumatran Orangutan Society
The young male orangutan is seen edging on to the bridge before making its way across. Halfway across, it pauses to look down at the road below, then back at the camera, before proceeding into the Sikulaping protection forest.
The canopy bridge allows critically endangered Sumatran orangutans to safely cross roads, reducing the risk of accidents and promoting wildlife movement.
The canopy bridge was built in the Pakpak Bharat district of North Sumatra, Indonesia, over the Lagan-Pagindar road.
The Sumatran Orangutan Society (SOS) and the environmental organization Tangguh Hutan Khatulistiwa (TaHuKah) collaborated on the construction of the canopy bridge.

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Orangutans, the largest arboreal (tree-dwelling) mammal, are a keystone species and spend more than 90% of their time in the forest canopy. They have excellent memories and can make mental maps of new routes through their forest habitat.
In total, there are three species of orangutan, and the entire wild population is concentrated in this corner of south-east Asia. There are only 14,000 Sumatran orangutans left, which makes them one of the world’s most threatened apes.
Franc Bernhard Tumanggor, head of the Pakpak Bharat district, said: “Witnessing a Sumatran orangutan confidently crossing that bridge is living proof that we need not sever the forest’s lifeline in order to build our communities’ own. Modernisation does not have to mean destruction.”
Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow the biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield in the Guardian app for more nature coverage