Member Profile
Membership type: full
Ayu Savitri Nurinsiyah
Country of origin: Indonesia Currently in: Indonesia, Tangerang General field of specialization: Biological Systems and Organisms-
Degrees
2018 Doctorate Biological Systems and Organisms -
Current Research Activities
Biological Systems and Organisms
My main research interest in on terrestrial Gastropods (land snails). For several years I have been working on the biosystematics, ecology, and biogeography of Java land snails. Currently, I am working on the Biology of land snails in Java, Indonesia and their bio active compound from the its slime.
Publications resulting from Research:
Nurinsiyah*, A.S., Neiber, M.T., Hausdorf, B. 2019. Revision of the land snail genus Landouria Godwin-Austen, 1918 (Gastropoda, Camaenidae) from Java. European Journal of Taxonomy, 526: 1-73. https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2019.526
Nurinsiyah*, A.S., Hausdorf, B. 2019. Listing, impact assessment and prioritization of introduced land snail and slug species in Indonesia. Journal of Molluscan Studies, 85: 92-102. https://doi:10.1093/mollus/eyy062
Nurinsiyah*, A.S., Hausdorf, B. 2017. Dicharax (?) candrakirana n.sp. (Gastropoda: Cyclophoridae) from Sempu Island, Indonesia. Zootaxa, 4363 (4): 589-591. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4363.4.12
Nurinsiyah*, A.S., Hausdorf, B. 2017. Revision of the Diplommatinidae (Gastropoda: Cyclophoroidea) from Java. Zootaxa, 4312 (2): 201-245. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4312.2.1
Nurinsiyah*, A.S., Fauzia, H., Hennig, C., Hausdorf, B. 2016. Native and introduced land snail species as ecological indicators in different land use types in Java. Ecological Indicators, 70: 557-665. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2016.05.013
Nurinsiyah, A.S. 2015. Land snail fauna of the Sukolilo karst in Java (Indonesia). American Conchologist, 43 (3): 30-32.
Nurinsiyah, A.S., Setiadi, T., Hausdorf, B. 2017. Predicting the distribution of two invasive land snail species Lissachatina fulica and Bradybaena similaris as a precaution alert for conservation area managers in Java, Indonesia. Abstract Proceeding in SAGE 2017 – the 3rd Southeast Asian Gateway Evolution Meeting: p.151
Nurinsiyah, A.S., Fauzia, H., Hennig, C., Hausdorf, B. 2017. Effect of different land use types on forest snail communities in Java, Indonesia. Mitgleidversammlung der Deuscthen Malakozoologischen Gesellschaft (2016). Mitt.dtsch.malakozool.Ges., 96: 49
Current profession
Current professional activities type:ResearchI am currently based in the Research Center for Biology, Indonesian Institute of Sciences as Junior Researcher specialized in the biosystematic of terrestrial gastropod.
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Other Awards
Nov 2019L'oreal-UNESCO For Women in Science, National Fellowship 2019, IndonesiaEstablished globally by L’Oréal and UNESCO in 1998 and launched nationally in Indonesia in 2004, L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women In Science has recognized and encouraged female scientists who move science forward because we believe that the world needs science and science needs women. Since 2004, 53 young female Indonesian scientists has been awarded which five of whom have received international awards. In 2019, L’Oréal Indonesia in collaboration with the Indonesian National Commission for UNESCO, Ministry of Education and Culture of the Republic of Indonesia award four female winners of young Indonesian scientists as National Fellows for L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science (FWIS) 2019.Dec 2019Tony Whitten Conservation PrizeTony Whitten (1953-2017) was an inspirational conservationist who championed biodiversity across Asia and beyond. He was Senior Advisor at Fauna and Flora International (serving as Director of its Asia-Pacific programme), and before that Senior Biodiversity Specialist at the World Bank. Alongside helping run conservation projects across Asia, Tony did world-class work on the discovery and conservation of limestone cave invertebrates, saving many species from obliteration by the region’s rapidly expanding cement industry, and having no fewer than 11 new species named in his honour. He also recently established the IUCN Cave Invertebrate Specialist Group. As a tribute to Tony the Cambridge Conservation Initiative is delighted to invite applications for this award for early career conservationists and biodiversity researchers from East and Southeast Asia. The prize is open to those under the age of 35 involved in any area of conservation or field biology in the region. Prizes will be awarded by a panel selected by Tony's family. The panel is especially interested in hearing about work on the overlooked species and habitats that Tony was most passionate about – such as caves and karst ecosystems, and understudied invertebrates and fishes. The fund is able to provide three prizes of £1000 each in late 2019, with further rounds in the following two years. Applicants should be nationals of Brunei, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Timor Leste or Vietnam.