Bearded
Pigs. (Photo courtesy of Wikimedia)
What is the most important wildlife species on Borneo?
Depending on whom you ask this question, answers will surely vary.
A forestry official
might argue that any tree of the dipterocarp family is obviously most
important, because that’s where the timber cash is. And for the same reason, an
oil palm grower would likely reply that the oil palm tree is by far the most
important species.
Many people in
Australia, Europe or North America may reply “the orangutan,” or maybe “the
rhino” or “proboscis monkey,” because, after all, those species are highly
threatened and many worry about their survival.
But ask a person from
Borneo and the dominant answer would likely be quite different. In fact, I
think that many would argue that the Bearded Pig is by far the most important.
Are you surprised? Had you even heard of Bearded Pigs? Bear with me and I will
explain.
First, a quick 101 on
these pigs. This enigmatic species of wild pig occurs only in the southern part
of Sumatra and on Borneo. And they indeed have beards, both males and females,
and are thus true jungle hipsters, at least in the sense of the current popular
beard subculture.
Interestingly, Bearded
Pigs are among the very few rainforest species that makes long distance
migrations, the kind of animal movement more associated with species like
Wildebeest on open African savannas.
Every so many years,
Bearded Pig populations erupt and thousands and thousands of pigs starts moving
through the jungle.
One such migration
which occurred in 1935 was described as follows: “For five or six weeks, at
points sixty to a hundred miles [100-160 kilometers] apart, moves a steady
stream of wild pigs, a few solitary, some family parties of seven or eight,
many packs from fifteen to thirty of forty, occasionally convoys estimated at
two hundred, sufficiently large to deter the natives from attack. Every ten
minutes or quarter of an hour pigs pass by, a few large, old individuals, many
of medium size, none in very fat condition. Silent, not quarrelsome, almost
furtive, intent on something, looking round little, they push on undeterred by
waiting natives, who club and spear them at river crossings until weary of
pork. Whence came the pigs, and where they go none know.”
Intriguing or what?
Now, depending on your
religion, you may consider pigs to be rather gross or totally wonderful.
Certainly, Christian communities on Borneo heavily rely on these pigs for meat
and other products.
Studies in Malaysian
Borneo indicated that between 54 percent and 72 percent of the dressed weight
of all animals hunted is Bearded Pig meat. A hunting study in one remote
village in Kalimantan showed that over a period of 21 months people caught 707
Bearded Pigs, which was probably more than 90 percent of the weight of all
species caught. In a different hunting study, people in one village caught 429
Bearded Pigs in one year or about 81 percent of the dressed weight of all
species. That adds up to a lot of pork!
For many millions of
people on Borneo, Bearded Pigs are the most important source of meat, although
apparently this is changing. Based on information from interviews across
Borneo, Bearded Pig populations seem to be in decline. The big migrations have
apparently stopped and increasingly small populations are now sedentary.
We don’t know what
causes these population declines. Bearded Pigs feed heavily on seeds of
dipterocarp trees, the same trees favored by the forestry officials mentioned above.
With many such trees now gone, pigs may have fewer resources to feed on. Also,
hunting pressure is and has always been high. But with forest habitats being
fragmented, there may now be many small populations of pigs whereas in the past
Borneo’s pigs were really one big population. Such small populations are easier
to hunt to extinction and once gone the pigs may not be able to move back in.
So, declining pig
populations are a worry for many people. If an estimated 4,000 Christian
villages on Borneo catch on average 300 pigs per year at 50 kilograms of
dressed meat per pig, and at a price of maybe $2 per kilogram, that would be
$120 million per year of free meat. If that meat is no longer available, people
would need to buy other meat in markets and for that they would need cash. In
poor rural societies though, availability of cash is often limited. Declining
wild pig populations could therefore have real impacts on people’s nutrition
and health.
Many local people are
very aware of the importance of pigs in their lives. In fact, I have found over
the years that it is much easier to talk to people about Bearded Pigs than
about a species like orangutans. In my experience, trying to talk to local
people in Borneo about orangutans sends them to sleep or makes them change the
subject within a few minutes. Start talking about pigs, though, and three days
later they will still be telling new stories.
Bearded Pigs are what
is called a cultural keystone species. They play a crucial role in many
people’s lives.
So, what to do about
declining populations? More research is needed, because we don’t know much
about these pigs. But while that research is happening, management can be
implemented as well. For example, experiments with no-hunting seasons or
no-take zones could be conducted to see how this affects overall population
trends.
Unless, we think that
local communities could develop and implement these hunting controls
themselves, such solutions require buy-in and policy assistance from
government. Unfortunately, however, governments on Borneo have generally not
paid much attention to pigs, maybe also because of religious reasons.
Interestingly, I came
across an article about Bearded Pigs in a colonial-era newspaper from 1935 that
noted exactly the same issue: “unregulated exploitation of the pigs could
result in their disappearance, and one cannot expect the required [management]
insights from these tribes, so that also here the Government will need to step
in and make required arrangements.”
Right, that’s 80 years
ago. So, when is the government going to step up to the task to ensure that
Borneo’s Jungle Hipster is there to stay for the benefit of Borneo’s people?
Erik Meijaard
coordinates the Borneo Futures initiative from Jakarta.
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