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PROFILE OVERVIEW
•Oldest research institution• Established in 1967• Its history is much older, rooted from colonial
era, in 1817 (Center for Plant Conservation/ Bogor Botanical Garden)
•Largest research Institution •Leading patent contributor in Indonesia
World Class Research Institution
26 Research Centers 16 Technical Implementation Units 4 Administrative Bureaus 2 International Center 4 Botanical Gardens 4823 employees (1543 researchers) Located in 11 provinces
Largest Research Institution
• Herbarium Bogoriense• Third largest herbarium in flora
reference collections• Established in 1817
• Zoologicum Bogoriense Museum• Top ten largest fauna specimen
reference collections
• 4 Botanical Gardens• Bogor (est. 1817), Cibodas (est. 1861) • Bali and Purwodadi (1941)
• Indonesian Culture Collection (2014)
World Class FacilitiesFor Biodiversity and Life Sciences
• 2 Marine Research Vessel• Baruna Jaya VII and VIII
• National Centre for Scientific Documentation and Information
• Center for Measurement and AssesmentStandards serves as National Reference for Measurement and Testing
Other Facilities
Chairman of LIPI
Executive SecretaryDeputy for Earth Science
Deputy for Life Science
Deputy for Engineering Science
Deputy for Scientific Services
Deputy for Social Science and Humanities
Vice Chairman
Dr. Akmadi Abbas
Dr. Siti Nuramaliati Prijono
Prof. Dr. Aswatini
Dr. Laksana Tri Handoko
Prof. Dr. Bambang Subiyanto
Prof. Dr. Enny Sudarmonowati
Prof. Dr. Iskandar Zulkarnain
Dr. Zainal Arifin
Organizational Hierarchy
RESEARCH CENTRES
Scientific Authority
1. Governing body for researchers nationwide (training, asssessment and authorization / granting of Research Professorships)
2. Accreditation for Indonesian scientific journals
3. Scientific authority in the fields of:
a) Biodiversity Conservation and Utilities eg.CITES
b) Botanical Gardens Construction and Management
1. Scientific Measurement and Testing
Research Areas
Engineering Sciences• Defence and Safety• IT, Telecommunication and Electronic• Clean Transportation• Advanced Material and Nanotechnology
Social Science and Humanities• Demography and Population• Cultural and Linguistic Studies• Policy and Good Governance• Regional and Local Autonomy• Conflict Studies and Poverty
Research Areas
Earth Sciences and Climate Change• Sustainable water supply• Integrated watershed and ecohydrological research• Coastal and maritime-based regional development• Climate change and Disaster risk reduction• Coral reef ecology and conservation• Coal and mineral resourcesLife Sciences and Biodiversity• Molecular Biology, Biotechnology, and Medicine• Biomedical sciences• Molecular farming and post-genomic• Exploration and Utilization of Biodiversity
• Asia-Pacific Centers for Ecohydrology(APCE)
• International Center for Interdisciplinary and Advanced Research(ICIAR)
International Centers
GermanyItalySpainFranceUK
USA
Australia
JapanChinaKoreaMalaysiaSingaporeVietnam
The NetherlandsPortugalCzech RepublicBelarus
Worldwide Network
International Collaboration(2010 – Mei 2015) : 64 Collaborations
IHP (International Hydrological Program) APCE (Asia Pacific Center for Ecohydrology)
IOC (Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission)
MOST (Management of Social Transformations)
MAB (Man and the Biosphere)10 Biosphere Reserves Nation Wide
IGBC (Intergovernmental Bioethics Committee)
UNESCONational Focal Points
SCA - Science Council of Asia Asia HORCs - Asian Heads of Research Councils AASSREC - Association of Asian Social Science Research Councils APCTT - Asian and Pacific Centre for Transfer of Technology CODATA - Committee on Data for Science and Technology ICSU - International Council for Science PSA - Pacific Science Association IFSSO - International Federation of Social Science Organization WAITRO - World Association of Industrial and Technological
Research Organization APMP - Asia Pacific Metrology Program BGCI - Botanic Gardens Conservation International IFMF - International Flora Malesiana Foundation GBIF - Global Biodiversity Information Facility
Membership International Scientific Organizations
ASEAN COST National Focal Points
SC on Technology
SC on Sustainable Energy Research
SC on Microelectronics and Information Technology
Sub Committee (SC) on Biotechnology
SC on Food Science and Technology
SC on Marine Science and Technology
ASEAN Commission on Science Technology:
Research Center for OceanographyIndonesian Institute of Sciences
Research Center for Oceanography• 1905 - Visscherij Station• 1915 - Visscherij Station te
Batavia• 1922 - Laboratorium Voor
Het Onderzoek der Zee (LOZ)
• 1949 - Laboratorioem Penjelidikan Laoet
• 1955 - Lembaga Penjelidikan Laoet
• 1962 - Lembaga Penelitian Laut
• 1970 - Lembaga Oseanologi Nasional (LON)
• 1986 - Pusat Penelitian dan Pengembangan Oseanologi-LIPI (Puslitbang Oseanologi - LIPI)
• 2001 - Pusat Penelitian Oseanografi - LIPI
TIU & Field Station
Mataram TualP. Pari
Bitung TernateBiak
RCO HQ- Jakarta
RV. BARUNA JAYA VII RV. BARUNA JAYA VIII
GWT: 641 T LOA : 49,9 m
GWT: 1250 T LOA : 50.0 m
RV BARUNA JAYA VII & VIIIMulti Purpose Research Vessel
Research Activities
Outcomes for last 5 years
Marine biodiversityMarine conservation and ecosystem healthMariculture and bioprospectingOceanography and global climate change
Marine Biodiversity• Marine
Sustainable Use (Coral Reefs, Seagrasses, Mangroves
• Exploration of marine ecosystems (EWIN)
Health and Marine Conservation• Bio-indicator of
coastal ecosystem health
• Bioremediation of marine ecosystem
• Coastal Management
Mariculture and Bioprospecting• Domestication of
sea cucumber, abalone, pearl oyster, seaweed
• Functional Food from sea cucumber
Role of the Sea in Climate Change• Carbon
Sequestration • Ocean
Acidification• Mitigation of
climate change on marine ecosystem
RESEARCH FOCUS 2015 - 2019Food sustainability from Indonesian Seas
Biodiversity & conservation1 DNA barcoding of coral associated organisms: Taxonomy & mollecular ecology2 Indonesia sea cucumber: exploration, management and oceanographic correlation3 Biodiversity of coastal organisms of south coast of JavaMarine resources & ecosystem health- COREMAP
Marine pollution & bioremediation4 Bioremediation technique using microorganism5 Bio-indicator as a proxy for anthropogenic marine pollution6 Sediment quality guidelineOceanography & global climate change7 Carbon stock & sequestration of marine vegetation area8 Mitigation and adaptation of global climate change for small IslandMariculture & bioprospecting9 Microalgae culture collection: Management and conservation10 Seahorse hatchery 11 Indonesian marine natural product database - imnpd
12 Functional food from Seacucumber
13 Refference Collection - Marine Natural History Museum
Future Plans
Establishment of UNESCO/IOC Regional Training and Research Center on Tropical Marine Biodiversity
(RTRC)
• Objectives To enhance capability of graduate students, young
scientists and young lecturers from Member States in the Western Pacific on taxonomy of marine biota, bio indicators, and coastal health indicators.
• Target Beneficiaries Students, young scientists/lecturers and communities from
Indonesia and other member States in the Western Pacific such as Timor Leste, Papua New Guinea, Myammar, Cambodia, Brunei Darussalam, Malaysia, Phillipines, Palau, Solomon and Vietnam.
33
Facilities for RTRC
• Building and facilities provided in Sasana Widya D.A. Tisna Amidjaja Building of LIPI, located in Jl. Raden Saleh 43, Jakarta 10330, is dedicated to run the RTRC-TMB activities.
• Laboratory and its equipment of RCO – LIPI.• Marine Field Station of RCO – LIPI in Pulau Pari (20
miles off Jakarta).• RV. Baruna Jaya VIII that owned by LIPI can be
operated to support training and research activities for RTRC-TMB.
Development of National Marine Natural History Museum
• Currently, we have 14,000 marine specimen that collected from Indonesian waters since 1900s.
• Scientifically, these are priceless. Some of those even have become rare or extinct species.
• However, currently, those specimen have not stored and displayed in appropriate manner.
• We establish the National Marine Natural Historical Museum. • Museum is one of tools for improving community awareness in the
importance of sea and it ecosystem. We also expect it becomes a marine biodiversity reference in national and international levels
• The museum will be built in Jakarta in Ancol in this area.
MASTER PLAN of RCO's Laband MARINE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
Establishment of new Field Station
2015 – 2019 --> Pulau Weh/Sabang
objectives:• To improve marine science• national Issues: food security, biodivTo answer
ersity loss, etc.• To answer internasional issue: climate change,
Indian Ocean and South China Sea• National agenda: Local Government proposal• International agenda: exercising Indonesian
sovereignty (overlapping claims)
TualLombokAmbon
Jakarta
Ternate BiakBitung
P. Pari
Kep. Natuna
P. Weh
Ukuran Utama (Main Measurement)
Panjang Keseluruhan (LOA) : 70.00 m
Lebar Terbesar (Moulded Breath) : 13.50 m
Bobot (Gross Tonnage) : 1500 GRT
Kecepatan (Cruise Speed) : 15 Knot Jarak Jelajah (Duration) : 30 days
Pelayar (Accommodation) : 50 Person
Spesifikasi Kapal dan Alat Penelitian
New research vessel --> Future Plan
E-WIN & E-Cruise 2017:Indonesia contribution to IIOE-2 and YMC 2017
Cruise plan (2015-2017)
Main goal
• The E-Cruise 2017 in general have a goal to uncover the oceanography profile and potential in the Eastern Indian Ocean, especially in north-western Sumateran waters. The main topic of this expedition is “Biogeochemical process in Eastern Indian Ocean regulated by Equatorial and Sumateran current.”
E-WIN 2015-2016 & E-Cruise 2017is a contribution to
International Indian Ocean Expedition – 2(IIOE-2)
Theme number 2 & 6 of IIOE-2 Science Plan:
II. Boundary current dynamics, upwelling variability and ecosystem impacts
VI. Unique geological, physical, biogeochemical and ecological features of the indian ocean
E-WIN 2015 recommendation to government
Main aspect e-Cruise 20171) spatial variability of formation of North Equatorial Current
and South Equatorial Counter Current, 2) plankton dynamics and its role in pelagic-benthic-coupling, 3) distribution of particulate organic matter and primary
productivity as well as nutrient flux, 4) biogeochemical role of bacteria as one of the important factor
in biological pump, 5) benthic community structure,6) geological and chemical profile of sediment as well as
pollution potential, 7) stock assessment study of pelagic fisheries with acoustic
technology, and 8) study in disaster risk (eartquake and tsunami).
• We will deploy RV Baruna Jaya VIII
• CTD System and Rossete Sampler, Aqustic Doppler Current Propile (ADCP), Fish Finder EK 500 (3500 m), Depth Sonar SD 570 with colour scope, Current meter Aanderaa DCS, Multibeam Echosounder Reason 7101 Seabate, Echosounder EA 500 (10000 m), Coring equipment (Gravity Core), Box Core, Plankton Net, Trawl Net.
• 25 - 30 days cruise• RCO, RCG, RCB - LIPI;
KKP; others (including foreign institutions)
• Additional lab equipment: [email protected]
Other related activities:• International seminar• Capacity building (training, master and
doctoral course)