Mount Leuser National Park
Mount Leuser National Park is one of the largest
national parks in the world, containing over 800,000 hectares of
virgin rainforest. The park is home to orangutans, gibbons, monkeys,
elephants, tigers, and among the last of the Sumatran rhinoceros.
There are research facilities for the study of primates, birds and
insects, the Orangutans rehabilitation center at Bukit Lawang being
the most popular with tourists. It is possible to raft Alas River
from Ketambe to the Indian Ocean on a 4 - 5 day expedition. The
journey takes us through exciting white-water rapids to the calmer,
crocodile-infested waters of the lowlands. Basic accommodation is
available at Ketambe.
The Leuser National Park of Gunung Leuser is probably
the wildest in Indonesia, located in Southeast Aceh, can be reached
from either Kutacane, or Takengon. This magnificent national park
has a wealth of flora and fauna. The Leuser Ecosystem is an outstanding
wilderness in Aceh northern Sumatra. It is one of the richest expanses
of tropical rain forest in Southeast Asia. More than 2.5 million
hectares in size, it is the last place on earth where elephants,
rhinos, tigers, clouded leopards, and orangutans are found within
one area.
The first official statement of intent to protect
the Leuser Ecosystem was signed in 1934. The Leuser International
Foundation (a non-profit non-government organization) was established
in the late 1990's when the ecosystem was seriously under threat
from illegal logging and wildlife poaching.
Geographically, the Leuser Ecosystem lies between 3-4.5° North
and 96.5-98° East. It covers approximately 2.6 million hectares
of tropical rain forest, encompassing 890,000 hectares of designated
national park, as well as extensive areas of protection and production
forests. The ecosystem contains two major volcanoes, three lakes,
and nine major river systems that flow to the east and west coasts
of the island.
The Leuser Ecosystem has an enormous level of biodiversity.
It contains at least 127 mammal species, including the Sumatran
elephant, Sumatran tiger, Sumatran rhinoceros, and Sumatran orangutan.
About 8,500 different plant species grow in the beach, swamp, lowland,
mountain and alpine ecosystems of the Leuser Ecosystem. Of the 10,000
plant species recorded in the West Indo-Malayan Region, 45% are
found in the Leuser Ecosystem. Spectacular plants such as Rafflesia
(the largest flower in the world) and Amorphophallus (the tallest
flower in the world) are among the plants protected there.
Mount Leuser National Park is one of the biggest
national parks in Indonesia (950,000 hectare). Actually, it's a
collection of various nature reserves and forests: Nature Reserve
Mount Leuser, Nature Reserve Kappi, Nature Reserve Kluet, Sikundur
Langkat Wildlife Reserve, Ketambe Research Station, Singkil Barat
and Dolok Sembilin. Most parts of the national park lie in the region
Aceh Tenggara (SE Aceh). Other parts are situated in the region
east Aceh, south Aceh, and Langkat.
Mount Leuser National Park comprises more than
100 kilometers of the Bukit Barisan Mountains. Because of that,
the park consists of steep, almost inaccessible mountainous terrain.
The altitude ranges from 0 meter, in Kluet (South Aceh), to 3,381
meter, on top of the mount Leuser (Southeast Aceh). The Alas River
cuts the park into an eastern and western half. Apart from mountains
we find several other ecosystems: beach forest, swamp areas, lowland
rainforest, alpine and mountain forest. In Bukit Lawang is the Orang
Utan Rehabilitation Station and in Ketambe stands the Ketambe research
station.
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