色情视频

Field Experience in Indonesia Immerses 色情视频 Students in Conservation and Primatology

Three anthropology majors traveled with professor Erin Riley to the islands of Java and Sulawesi through 色情视频 Global Education.

Tuesday, September 6, 2022
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Melissa Callado (left) uses binoculars while Pedro Rios and Jadyn Skipper and Indonesian researchers in Gunung Halimun Salak National Park, Indonesia look on. (Photo by Rahayu Oktaviani)

This summer, three 色情视频 undergraduates visited Indonesia to learn about biodiversity conservation and primate behavior. The immersive field experience was led by anthropologist Erin Riley, who has conducted fieldwork there for more than 20 years. 

The three-week trip, funded by the  Student-Faculty Fellows program, was delayed a year because of COVID-19 travel restrictions. 

Anthropology majors Melissa Callado, Jadyn Skipper and Pedro Rios prepared by taking Riley鈥檚 Exploring Primate Behavior class (ANTH 355) and reading up on biodiversity conservation and human-primate interactions. They also became aware of how their backgrounds and viewpoints might impact their understanding of other cultures. 

Once in Indonesia, the students attended a symposium on the island of Java on women in primatology.

鈥淭hat was a great way for the students to learn about research being done in primatology, by both Westerners and also Indonesian scholars,鈥 said Riley. 

Next, the group proceeded to Gunung Halimun Salak National Park, a mountainous region where one of Riley鈥檚 Indonesian colleagues studies the Javan gibbon, an endangered ape under threat from habitat destruction and the wild pet trade. Stepping into the tropical rainforest invokes all of the senses, said Riley.

鈥淥ftentimes when you find the primates, it's not necessarily because you've seen them, it's because you hear them: you're constantly listening for different sounds,鈥 she said.

Data gathering

The 色情视频 students shadowed Indonesian students in the forest as they collected data about the gibbons鈥 diet and health for their research projects. 

The students also met members of a women鈥檚 empowerment community outreach project to learn how to make ecoprints: colorful textiles decorated with leaves and flowers gathered from the forest that the women sell to tourists.

鈥淢y students don't speak very much Indonesian, and the women in the village don't speak English, and yet they were able to work together to create these really amazing ecoprints,鈥 said Riley.

Callado said knowing about how life happens in other regions  鈥渃an make one very humble and also grow empathy. 鈥淚 think it can teach us a lot about ourselves, having a different perspective. And it's just gonna help us be more tolerant 鈥 and we need a lot of that in the world.鈥

After Java, it was on to the island of Sulawesi, home to many species of macaque monkeys. Here, they participated in workshops on biodiversity conservation and scientific fieldwork methods at Hasanuddin University. They also collaborated with Indonesian students on a project to develop educational materials about primate conservation.

鈥淚n Indonesia, people just assume monkeys are everywhere in the world,鈥 said Rios. 鈥淎 lot of the kids living in the national park or on the mountain aren't even aware that they're living in nature or in a protected area. They just think 鈥榦h, this is normal,鈥 but it's like, 鈥榥o, you're living in a really special place.鈥欌

The group then headed north to Bantimurung-Bulusaraung National Park, staying with a host family in a nearby village of Bengo. Inside the park, they tested out the fieldwork techniques they had learned in ANTH 355 and during the workshops by observing the behavior of moor macaque monkeys. 

鈥淔or us, it was really a great insight into how you can do these observations,鈥 said Callado. 鈥淵ou really need to know a lot about monkeys. They all have species particularities, but then they also have very individual ways of behaving. You need to know if it's a male or a female, or if it鈥檚 a leader or not, and the social hierarchy of this individual..鈥

Riley has studied how the monkeys have adapted as humans have moved into their habitat, converting forests to agricultural land. 

鈥淭hat changes the landscape and it often can result in conflict between the monkeys and the people,鈥 said Riley. 

Future directions

Upon returning to the U.S., the students wrote reports on their experiences for ASIANetwork. They will also continue their collaboration with their Indonesian counterparts on the conservation education project.

The trip also opened up academic and career opportunities. All of the students are considering graduate programs in wildlife conservation and primatology. Callado secured employment with a conservation non-profit, while Skipper is continuing her study abroad adventures, this time in the Netherlands. 

Riley obtained funding from the National Science Foundation鈥檚 International Research Experiences for Students program to support three years of human-primate conflict research training in Indonesia for 色情视频 students. Applications will open for next year鈥檚  in October. 

To learn more about 色情视频鈥檚 other international programs, visit Global Education.

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