| Indonesia ist the
largest archipelago and the fourth most populated country
in the world. Consisting of five main islands and 30 smaller
archipelagos, it has a total of 17.508 islands of which about
6.000 are inhabited. It stretches 5.150 km between the Australian
and Asian continental mainlands and divides the Pasific and
Indian Oceans at the Equator. The name Indonesia is composed
of two Greek words: "Indos" which means Indian,
and "Nesos" meaning islands. The five biggest islands
are Kalimantan or two thirds of the islands of Borneo (539,450
sq.km), Sumatra (473,606 sq.km), Papua, which forms part of
the island of New Guinea (421,952 sq.km), Sulawesi (189,035
sq.km) and Java including Madura (132,035 sq.km). A democratic
republic, Indonesia is divided into 32 provinces and special
territoriesand classified geographically into four groups.First
is the Greater Sundas, comprising the larger islands of Sumatra,
Java, Kalimantan and Sulawesi. Second ist the Lesser Sundas
consisting of smaller islands from Bali eastward to Timor.
Third is Maluku which includes all islands between Papua and
Sulawesi. The fourth group is Papua in the extreme eastern
part of the country. The strategic position of the archipelago
as well as the history of Indonesia, both political and economic,
have been conditioned by geography.
The greater part of the country falls with in the boundaries
of the equatorial rain belt. It has characteristically a tropical
climate. Its geographical make up is an archipelago of mostly
small island surrounded by sea. However, it allows an active
air circulation. As a result, the climate is closely similar
to that of prevailing in the equatorial zones above the world’s
oceans. Abundant rainfall, high temperatures and humidity
are characteristic to the average Indonesian lowland climate.
The lowest average temperature is 18 degree Celsius. Moreover,
the proximity of the Asian and Australian Continents brings
the Indonesian archipelago well within the Asian characteristic
that keeps alternating in accordance with the seasons. The
trade and monsoon winds coming from the Indian and Pacific
oceans temper the tropical character of the climate.
In Indonesia only two seasons prevail, a dry and wet, or rainy
season. In most areas, the rainy season lasts from December
up to March and driy season from May to October, with the
transition periods characterized by shifting winds and capricious
weather occuring in the months of March to May and September
to November. The transitional period between these two seasons
alternates between gorgeous sun-filled days and occasional
thunderstorms. Even in the midst of the wet season temperature
could range from 21 degrees (70 degrees Fahrenheit) to 33
degrees Celsius (90 degreed Fahrenheit), except at higher
altitudes, which can be much cooler. The heaviest rainfall
is usually recorded in December and January each year.
Fauna
Within the Indonesian archipelago lies one of the most remarkable
zoogeographical boundaries in the world, which dates back
to the glacial period when the sea level fell worldwide. In
that glacial period, Java, Sumatra, and Kalimantan lay on
the Sunda self and were joined to each other and to the mainland
of Asia, but Papua and the Australian continent at that time
lay on the Sahul shelf. This original geographical segregation
explains why the typical oriental fauna species found in Java,
Sumatra and Kalimantan are completely lacking in Papua. Similarly,
the marsupials, which occur in Papua, are not found in the
Oriental Region.
The region between these two shelves (Maluku,
Sulawesi and the Lesser Sunda Islands) has another type of
fauna. The bulk of Oriental fauna does not occur in Sulawesi,
although it is only 50 km from Kalimantan across the Makassar
strait, and the islands, such as Seram and Halmahera, closest
to Papua lack the major part of the latter's fauna. This may
be on the account of the ancient presence of a deep strait
between Kalimantan and Sulawesi and the depth of the Banda
Sea so that this group of islands may never have been connected
with either shelves during the glacial period. Scientists
describe this situation in terms of three faunal lines: Wallace's
(a line drawn from south to north through Lombok and Makassar
straits, ending at the southeast of the Philippines), Weber's
(a line drawn and passing through the sea between Maluku and
Sulawesi) and Lydekker’s ( a line drawn at the edge
of the Sahul shelf, which skirts the western border of Papua
and the Australian continent)- although some of them prefer
to characterize the zone itself as a "subtractible-transition
zone”.
Information obtained from the paleontological
record reveals that the number of species known today is much
smaller in the past. The extinction of many species of animals
was probably due to normal ecological and evolutionary processes
related to such factors as shifting sea levels, climatic changes
and habitat alternations. For example, in Java, out of at
least 75 species of mammals known as fossils, 35 are extinct,
20 still survive and 20 are extinct in Java but found elsewhere
in Asia. The more recent process of extinction of certain
animals in Java may have been related to human influences
on the ecosystem.
At the present stage of Indonesian social and
economic development, wildlife is considered as being incapable
of caring for itself. In order to safeguard and protect wildlife
in Indonesia, the Directorate of Nature Conservation and Wildlife
Management (Direktorat Perlindungan dan Pengawetan Alam) or
PPA as abbreviated has set the target of designating about
10% of land as serve areas. There are at present 320 natural
preserves and natural parks in Indonesia, and more being proposed.
The PPA has adopted the modern natural conservation
practice, which emphasizes the conservation of the entire
ecosystem. This is necessary , as it is often not possible
to preserve wildlife without its habitat. For example, the
orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus), found only in Sumatra and Kalimantan,
is very dependent on primary forest habitat. Therefore, to
protect their habitat, the PPA in cooperation with the World
Wildlife Fund (WWF) has established "Orang Utan Rehabilitation"
Project in Bohorok and in Tanjung Putting reserves, in Sumatra
and Kalimantan respectively, for retraining illegally captured
orangutans for life in the wilderness.
The Komodo dragon (Varanus komodoensis) which
is the largest lizard in the world, reaching a length of 2
to 3 meters, has its home in the Komodo group of reserves,
comprising Komodo, Padar, and Rinca Islands, eastward of Java,
off the west coast of Flores.
Due to its geographical isolation frorn other
land masses for a longer period than the other major islands,
Sulawesi has a unique fauna comprising of many endemic species
and many variations thereof. The babirusa or pigdeer (Babyroussa-babyroussa)
and the anoa, a forest-dwelling dwarf buffalo are among the
interesting endemic animals of Sulawesi. Other endemic mammals
of Sulawesi are the giant parn civet (Macrogalidia musschenbroeki),
the largest of all civets, a species of tarsier (Tarsius spectrum),
and several forms of the Sulawesi macaque (Cynopithecus niger).
Among the many species of birds in Sulawesi,
two species of the megapode birds, the maleo fowl and the
Sulawesi shrubhen, are very interesting. Papua and Maluku
areas are rich in colorful birds, ranging frorn the great
flightless cassowaries (Casuarius-casuarius) to brilliantly
plumaged birds of paradise of the family Paradiseidae and
Ptilinorhynhidae (more than 40 species altogether) and many
numbers of the parrot family.
Other members of the Oriental fauna are the hornbills
of the family Bucerotidae, which are noted for their enormous
beak topped by a bony casque, elephants (Elephas indicus),
roaming the forest of Sumatra and Kalimantan, the Sumatran
tigers (Panthera tigris Sumatrae), and the very small number
of rernaining Java tigers (Panthera tigris Sondaica), the
Mentawai macaquel and leaf monkey Mentawai (Macoca pagensis
and Prebystis potenziani) only found on the Mentawai Islands,
off the west coast of Sumatra, the small number of one-horned
rhinoceros (Rhinoceros sondaicus) found only in the Ujung
Kulon reserve in West Java.
Besides, many interesting animals are worthy
to note, such as the banteng (Boss Javanicus), three kangaroo
(Dorcopsis mulleri) frorn Papua, fresh-water dolphin (Orcaella
brevirostris) frorn Mahakarn River in Kalimantan and the proboscis
monkey also from Kalimantan. In addition there are the great
variety of birds including egrets, herons, kingfishers, hawks,
eagles, and many others, thousands of species of insects,
tortoises, turtles, and many kinds of lizards and snakes,
and also exotic species of fishes, crabs, mollusks and other
aquatic animals living both in salt and fresh water .
Some parts of the Indonesian archipelago are still unexplored
and open for botanical and zoolagical surveys and discoveries.
-Ornamental Fish-
Indonesia is also known for its ornamental fish species
which are now being exported to the United States, Japan,
and Germany. These ornamental fish species which are known
for their colorful shape and beauty include: the Amphiprion
fish, the Dascyllus, the red colored Labridae and the Coris
Aygula species found in plenty around the Bali strait.
Doctor fishes or Labroidae dimidiatus are ornamental
fishes which behave like doctors, examining their patients
or pecking the body of other fishes. The most common species
among Indonesia's ornamental fishes are the ThaIassoma lunare.
The Chaetotontidae have small beaks, but the Forcipiger longirostris
and the Rostratus fish are characteristic for their long snouts.
The Heniches acuminatus have very long back-fins exceeding
their body length and the Monish idol or Zanclus canescens
can have a size of 20 cm.
Pamancanthus imperator, Pamancanthus semicirculatus,
Pygoplites-diacanthus and Auxiphipos navarchus or angle fishes
belonging to the Parnancanthidae families are collected because
of their beautiful colors.
The Acarthuridaes and Paracunthurus hepatus fishes
are very attractive due to their specific bluish color. Other
attractive species are the Acunthurus-Ieucostemon fish, the
Zebrazoma veliverum and the Naso-literature fishes. Fishes
living in solitude are the Triggerfishes or Balistidaes.
Sea Horses or Hippocampus-coronatus of the family
are also among the ornamental fishes collected in Indonesia.
The Peacock fishes are called so after their long fins, found
in Indonesian waters are the Ptrerois-zebra, Pterois-bachiopterus,
P. Volitans, P Rusellii, P Miles and the Radiatas, all of
them belongin to the Scorpanidae family. There are still many
other species of ornamental fish in Indonesia, too many to
be mentioned.
-Pearl Shells-
Pearl oysters found in Indonesia are the Pictada
maxima, Pmagaritifera and Rteria penguin species. The seas
of Indonesia’s eastern part around Halmahera Island,
the Maluku and Aru islands are the habitat of these species.
Pearl oysters became an important marine product
after the setting up of the Marine Fisheries Research Institute
(LPPL) in 1960 which started to conduct research and conducting
experiments on the cultivation of pearl bearing oysters on
the island of Aru and in Sulawesi. The series of successful
experiments have given rise to the establishment of several
pearl cultivation companies in the country . Indonesian pearls
are in great demand because of their large size and superb
quality. Pearl shells are found plentifully in Maluku. People
used to dive for these shells for their iridescent colors
and make of them beautiful ornamental articles and jewelry.
Flora
Indonesia lies within the botanical region of
Melanesia, covering the Malay peninsula south of the isthmus
of Kra, the Indonesia archipelago the Philippines and the
whole of Papua New Guinea and Papua except the Solomon Islands.
For the most part the Melanesian region is covered by the
luxuriant growth of the characteristical tropical rainforest
vegetation, a type of ever-wet vegetation containing a large
number of timber species harboring various kinds of epiphytes,
saprophytes and lianas. These characteristic features and
the high number of genera and species endemic within this
region make the flora of Indonesia completely different from
that of neighboring continental Asia and Australia, as weIl
as from the flora of other tropical areas in the world. The
richness of the Melanesian region of which Indonesia represents
the major portion, is reflected in the accommodation of close
to 40,000 species of pants, or about 10-12% of the estimated
number of plant species in the whole world.
Above an altitude of 1,000 m, a better development
of what is normally considered temperature families can be
seen, such as the Rosaceae, Lauraceae, Fogaceae, etc. Higher
still, elfin or mossy forest and alpine vegetation are found,
but comparatively speaking this is insignificant since the
major part of Indonesian land-mass consists of lowland.
As might be expected, the rich flora of Indonesia
contains many unique examples of tropical plaht life and manifestations
Rafflesia arnoldi, which is found only in certain parts of
Sumatra is the plant with the largest flower in the world;
this parasitic plant grows on certain lianas but does not
produce leaves. From the same area in Sumatra comes another
giant, Amorphoplalus titanum, with the largest inflorescence
of its kind. The insect trapping pitcher plants (Nepenthea
Spp.) are represented by different kinds of species from many
areas in western Indonesia. The myriad of orchids found in
Indonesia are rich in size and from including the largest
of all orchids, the tiger orchid Grammatophyllum speciosum,
to the tiny and leafless specise of Taeniophyllum used by
the local people as a source of food and handicraft. The forest
ground in Indonesia is so rich in litter enabling a multitude
of fungi to grow lux horsehair blight, the luminescent species,
the sooty mould and the the black mildew.
Moreover, the flora making up the Indonesian
vegetation abounds in timber species. The Dipterocarp family
is world famous as the main source of timber (the meranti)
as well as resin and vegetable fat, tengkawang or illipe nuts.
Ramin, a valuable kind of timber for furniture, is obtained
from species of Ganystylus, whereas sandalwood, ebony, ulin
an the kayu Palembang are taken directly from the forest.
Besides, Indonesia is also known for its teakwood, a product
of man-made forest in Java.
In view of the richness of the Indonesian flora
it isn’t surprising that the Indonesian people are depending
heavily on these natural resources to support their daily
life. Approximately 6000 species of Indonesian plants are
known to be used directy by the local people. Most characteristic
in this modern time is probably the use of plants as the source
of raw material for Indonesia’s traditional herbal medicine
(Jamu) and as indispensable part in ceremonies, customs and
traditions.
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