Portrait of  Ardiantiono

Ardiantiono

GCDC Doctoral Candidate, School of Anthropology and Conservation

About

“My research identifies the trends and drivers of tropical terrestrial vertebrate population dynamics in the past, present, and future. The first part of my research will utilize the existing ecological data (camera trap, wildlife sign survey, protection patrol data) to understand how wildlife populations respond to landscape changes and anthropogenic pressures in one of the largest tropical forest landscapes in Sumatra Island, Indonesia. The next part would be exploring deep into the human dimension to understand motivations that drive someone to conduct activities that might influence wildlife populations. Last, I will dive into the policy aspect where I will combine socio-ecological information generated from this study to predict the future of wildlife persistence under various economic development and conservation scenarios.

I completed my Postgraduate Diploma in International Wildlife Conservation Practice at the University of Oxford. Before I started my Ph.D. study, I have worked with Wildlife Conservation Society-Indonesia Program and Komodo Survival Program to monitor Sumatran tiger and hornbill populations in protected areas and to document lessons learned and propose strategies for human-wildlife coexistence programs involving tiger, elephant, and Komodo dragon.

More about my work can be seen here https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ardiantiono_Only

Ardian’s thesis is entitled “The patterns and processes of defaunation in Java and Sumatra, Indonesia”, and contributes to a Leverhulme-funded project led by Dr Matthew Struebig.

Supervision

Ardian is supervised by Dr Matthew Struebig and Dr Joseph Bull from the School of Anthropology and Conservation

Last updated 19th November 2020