Research Fingerprints
Automated semantic analysis of research output.
Core Expertise
Semantic Radar
Complete Taxonomic Profile
Artificial intelligence analyzes all abstracts and manuscript metadata to precisely map the consistency and weight of research fields.
Seagrass100%
Biology93%
Geography71%
Environmental science69%
Ecology68%
No Co-Authored Relations Detected
Once publications with internal authors are synced, building the mapped network takes place automatically.
Global Collaborations & Top Areas
Interactive map showing the intensity of the author's research collaborations across the globe over the last five years.
Mapping geodata...
Research OutputQ2×
Features output statistics and 14 synchronized journal, conference, and book publications.
14 Works
ArticleSCOPUSOpen Access2026
Spatio-temporal distribution of seagrass extent in three zones of Spermonde Archipelago, Indonesia
Widhah S.F.
ArticleSCOPUSOpen Access2025
New distribution record of seagrass Ruppia brevipedunculata from intertidal cultivation ponds in South Kalimantan, Indonesia
Salim D.
ArticleSCOPUSSDG 142025
Preliminary Exploration of Unreported and Unregulated Sea Urchin Exploitation in Eastern Indonesia
Tamti H.
ArticleSCOPUSSDG 142025
Ecological insights into circular putative plasmids in Stylissa carteri microbiomes across the Indo-Pacific
Oliveira V.
ArticleSCOPUSOpen AccessSDG 142024
Short Communication: Potential threats to seagrass in the waters of Tanah Bumbu District, South Kalimantan, Indonesia
Salim D.
ArticleSCOPUSSDG 142023
Two centuries of sponges (phylum Porifera) taxonomic studies in Indonesia (1820–2021): checklist and bibliography
Putra S.A.
ArticleSCOPUSOpen AccessSDG 142023
Hydrodynamics across seagrass meadows and its impacts on Indonesian coastal ecosystems: A review
Risandi J.
ArticleSCOPUSOpen Access2022
Local Ecological Knowledge Reveals Change in Seagrass Social–Ecological Systems
Jones B.L.H.
ArticleSCOPUSSDG 142022
Strategies to Improve Management of Indonesia’s Blue Carbon Seagrass Habitats in Marine Protected Areas
Rifai H.
ArticleSCOPUSOpen AccessSDG 142021
Rising temperature is a more important driver than increasing carbon dioxide concentrations in the trait responses of enhalus acoroides seedlings
Artika S.R.
Showing 1 to 10 of 14 works