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Nurul Silva Lestari

Researcher at Indian Ministry of Environment and Forests

Publications -  11
Citations -  74

Nurul Silva Lestari is an academic researcher from Indian Ministry of Environment and Forests. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental science & Biology. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 8 publications receiving 54 citations. Previous affiliations of Nurul Silva Lestari include Ministry of Forestry.

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Annual Variation in Ecology and Reproduction of Wild Simakobu (Simias concolor)

TL;DR: Although sample sizes are very small, females seemed to conceive when their physical condition was best, suggesting that simakobu time conceptions flexibly to the recovery of energy reserves, indicating that simAKobu reproduction is not strictly seasonal.
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Opportunities and challenges for an Indonesian forest monitoring network

TL;DR: Based on the current inventory of permanent sampling plots (PSPs) in Indonesia, there is high potential to establish a long-term collaborative forest monitoring network as discussed by the authors, which can help us understand and better conserve these exceptionally diverse ecosystems.
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Demography of Simakobu (Simias concolor) and the Impact of Human Disturbance

TL;DR: The authors in this article investigated the demography of ten wild simakobu groups from January 2007 until December 2008 at an undisturbed site, the Peleonan Forest, Siberut Island, Indonesia, and documented demographic changes due to births, disappearances, and dispersals throughout a 2-year study.
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Population Density and Habitat Characteristics of Nipa Fruticans in Degraded Mangrove Ecosystem (Case Study in Mahakam Delta, East Kalimantan)

TL;DR: Results showed that nipa habitat in study site is characterized by high turbidity and low salinity, among other parameters, tidal level has strongest correlation to nipA population density.
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Are simakobu (Simias concolor) loud calls energetically costly signals

TL;DR: Results only weakly support the hypothesis that the timing and duration-but not rate-of simakobu loud calls are influenced by energy costs, and hypothesize that calling rates instead reflect strategies involving feeding and/or mate competition, signaling the motivation, rather than fighting ability, of the caller.