Adhi Nurul Hadi
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ANALYZING RUNOFF DYNAMICS THROUGH PARAMETERIZING A HYDROLOGICAL MODEL IN A WATERSHED: A CASE STUDY IN UPPER SERAYU BASIN, CENTRAL JAVA PROVINCE, INDONESIA Adhi Nurul Hadi; Sudibyakto Sudibyakto; Dhruba Shrestha
Indonesian Journal of Geography Vol 43, No 1 (2011): Indonesian Journal of Geography
Publisher : Faculty of Geography, Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22146/ijg.2293

Abstract

This research constructed a hydrological model by means of available data,hydrological equations, and GIS program to find out the runoff dynamic on thestudy area. The runoff dynamic was analyzed by describing runoff on different landcover types, figuring the correlation between hydrological component and runoff,calculating the sensitivities of the hydrological components to runoff, andidentifying the response of runoff to possible land cover change. The modelresulted that the highest runoff occurred on built up area and the lowest occurredon cultivation area. Infiltration was also the hydrological component that mostlyinfluenced runoff. Replacing forest, shrub, and plantation by cultivation greatlyreduced runoff up to 49 %. Enlarging forest area increased runoff about 12 %.Based on those findings, the hydrological component having the strongestcorrelation with runoff gave the most influence to runoff change, and enlargingforest area does not always decrease runoff.
ANALISIS KONTEN PEMBERITAAN INTERAKSI MANUSIA-SATWA PREDATOR DI INDONESIA Ardiantiono Ardiantiono; Afrizal Maula Alfarisi; Yanuar Ishaq; Rhemawati Wijaya; Reza Septian; Adhi Nurul Hadi
Jurnal Belantara Vol 5 No 2 (2022)
Publisher : Forestry Study Program University Of Mataram

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.29303/jbl.v5i2.874

Abstract

Media reports on human-predator interaction can influence public attitudes and supports toward wildlife conservation. Negative interactions between humans and wildlife in Indonesia are dominated by two predator species: Sumatran tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae) and saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus). This research aims to characterize the patterns of media reporting on human-predator interaction and compare the reporting between tiger and crocodile. Media reports published between 2017-2019 were collected from online mass media using Google News searching tool. Four parameters were used to evaluate the media content: tone, framing, illustration, and objectivity. Reports on human-tiger interaction (HTI; 356 articles) and human-crocodile interaction (HCI; 430 articles) showed similar patterns including dominant negative headline tone, neutral reporting focusing on interaction events, use of neutral-safe illustrations, and objective reporting. Further investigation showed that some aspects of media reporting on HCI differed from HTI. Reporting on HTI incidents used more negative contents and illustrations; and was not as comprehensive as HTI reporting. To promote balanced reporting, this research recommends collaboration between practitioners, scientists, and media to increase the media awareness on human-predator interactions and wildlife conservation; to write engaging content; and to increase the roles of practitioners and scientists as writers and sources in mass media.