Orangutan Island


Orangutan Island is an American documentary television series, in the style of the earlier series Meerkat Manor, that blends more traditional documentary filming with dramatic narration. The series was produced by NHNZ with creator Judith Curran also acting as the series producer. Animal Planet's Martha Ripp is the executive producer of the series, and Lone Drøscher Nielsen of the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, the founder, and manager of the Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Reintroduction Project, regularly appears with the orangutans in the show. The series premiered on Animal Planet on November 2, 2007, with new episodes airing Friday nights. A second season began airing in November 2008.
The show focuses on a group of orphaned orangutans at the Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Rescue and Rehabilitation Center that are raised to go against their normally independent nature and instead cooperate and live together in a society so they can be left to live wild on their protected island.
A follow-up series titled Orangutan Jungle School began airing on More 4 in 2018.

The Orangutans

, a psychologist who has conducted extensive research in primate intelligence is acting as a scientific adviser for the series. Lone Drøscher Nielsen is the founder and project manager of the Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Rescue and Reintroduction Center and regularly appears in the show interacting with and caring for the orangutan orphans.

Episodes

Season 1: 2007-2008

Season 2: 2008-2009

Events since the end of the series

was forced to leave Nyaru Menteng for a time due to health reasons but returned in late 2012. "Two years ago my doctor told me to move back to Europe. My health could not keep up with life in the rainforest anymore, and I got an infection which turned out to be life threatening. In the spring I finally received green light to return home to my wonderful red friends at Nyaru Menteng. Though at first only for a trial period to see if my health could keep up. Luckily my health kept up fine with my Borneo visit and my three weeks in the forest passed without problems."
Releasing rehabilitated orangutans to their natural habitat is the ultimate goal of orangutan sanctuaries. On February 15, 2013, Mogok became the first of the orangutans depicted in the series to be released to the wild as part of a group of five semi-wild and 15 rehabilitated orangutans who were transported from the Central Kalimantan Orangutan Reintroduction Program at Nyaru Menteng to release points in Bukit Batikap Conservation Forest over a period of three days. The following day, Alibaba became the second orangutan from the series to be released.
After spending a few months in the wild, Mogok contracted a massive threadworm infection, and trackers found him very weak. He was evacuated back to Nyaru Menteng in late August 2013. Despite 24-hour veterinary treatment, he died on September 12, 2013. Ms. Nielsen said, "It is extremely sad to lose an orangutan that we worked so hard to rehabilitate and return to the wild, but we were always realistic from the start that not all of our orangutans would make it – even wild orangutans die in the forest to illness or injuries."
To coincide with the 68th anniversary of Indonesia's independence, a group of 18 orangutans were released into Bukit Batikap Conservation Forest on August 16 and 17, 2013. Among that group was Bule, who became the third animal from Orangutan Island to be released back to the wild. At the end of November 2013, two more of Orangutan Island's inhabitants were released. The following day, Bertha went to her new home in the forest.
Some orangutans shown on the program have died since the series concluded, before they could be released to the wild. According to Lone Drøscher Nielsen's Facebook page, these orangutans have died: