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Red-Headed Orangutan Attempts Rescue, Ignored by Manager – Wild Animals: Who Knows What Will Happen?

A red-haired orangutan stretched out its hand to help, but was ignored by the forest manager: Wild animals, who knows what will happen next.

KKnews reported, February 8, 2020 at 14:47

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Recently, a forest protected by the Orangutan Survival Foundation on the island of Borneo in Indonesia witnessed a rare event. A manager received a report of snakes and came to clear the water pool. But the water pool was very muddy, making it difficult for him to move his body. The nearby red-haired orangutans saw this and came to the shore, as if to say 'Do you need help?' However, the manager ignored the orangutans' good intentions.

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According to the US Cable News Network, geologist Prabakar and his friends recently went to Borneo, Indonesia to travel and photographed this scene. He said the whole process lasted 3 to 4 minutes, and the manager and the red-haired orangutans pulled away from each other, and he climbed out of the water pool himself. When asked later why he didn't accept the orangutans' good intentions, the manager said, 'They are wild animals, who knows what they will do next.'

US Cable News Network reported that the number of red-haired orangutans in Borneo has declined by 80%. They not only have a slow breeding rate but also face forest fires, loss of habitat and hunting. Injured orangutans are brought to the protected forest for recovery and then released back into the wild.

80%

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