Erni Suyanti Musabine is an Indonesian wildlife veterinarian. She works for the Wildlife Rescue Unit of the IndonesianMinistry of Environment and Forestry. Since 2007, her work has focused on the conservation and rescue ofSumatran tigers.
Erni Suyanti Musabine was born inNganjuk on 14 September 1975,[1] the third daughter of H Musabine.[2]
She studied veterinary medicine atAirlangga University inSurabaya, graduating in 2002. During her studies, she volunteered for a wildlife conservation organisation in East Java.[3] The 1966 filmBorn Free was among the influences that fostered Yanti's passion for wildlife.[4]
Yanti volunteered with the Petungsewu Wild Animal Rescue Center inMalang from 2002 to 2003. She was hired as veterinarian coordinator by the center in 2003, providing care for species that had been confiscated from illegal traders and hunters in Bali and East Java.[3] When she was first hired as a veterinarian, her monthly salary wasRp150,000-300,000.[5] Yanti moved to Sumatra in 2004 where she worked for the Institution for Conservation of Natural Resources (BKSDA) in Bengkulu.[3] She was the only woman on the East Java BKSDA team.[5] During her time at Bengkulu BKSDA, she received the Great Woman award (Wanita Berani) fromLiputan 6.[2][6]
Yanti was a veterinary consultant for theFrankfurt Zoological Society from 2005 to 2009, working for a conservation program rehabilitatingSumatran orangutans at theBukit Tigapuluh National Park inJambi.[4][3]
From 2007 to 2013, she consulted for the Tiger Protection and Conservation Unit of theKerinci Seblat National Park. In 2007, she rescued a Sumatran tiger caught in a snare on a rubber plantation in the interior of North Bengkulu. She had to sedate the animal before releasing it from the trap. Having limited equipment, she administered the tranquillizer with a hand syringe.[4][1]
In 2011, during the rescue of an elephant, she was informed of a tiger caught in a hunter's trap in Air Rami,Mukomuko Regency. The tiger was in a remote jungle location, requiring three days of travel, two of which were on foot through rough terrain. She and her colleagues performed an amputation in the jungle. The tiger later requiredskin grafting.[1][4]
In 2012 and 2013, she was a field coordinator for the Seblat Elephant Conservation Center and a wildlife conservation veterinarian field leader of Seblat Ecotourism Park's Conservation Response Unit.
Beginning in May 2014, she started working as a wildlife conservation veterinarian with the Wildlife Rescue Unit of the IndonesianMinistry of Environment and Forestry where she focused on larger mammals such as elephants, tigers, bears, orangutans, and tapirs.[1][7] Her work also involvesclouded leopards andsun bears.[5] Her job involves handling, rehabilitating and reintroducing wild animals confiscated from illegal trade, illegal keeping, and poaching.[4]
During her career, Yanti has participated in over a dozen rescues of tigers inBengkulu province.[7] She rescued a tiger in 2014 that had escaped a trap but was entangled in barbed wire. She had to search the brush for the tiger, which was hiding in the bushes.[1] During a rescue in October 2015, she had to relocate two Sumatran tigers to the Kerinci Seblat National Park, Bengkulu.[4] One of the tigers had been ensnared in apalm oil plantation. The relocation involved an hour-long crossing of the Seblat River in a narrow canoe, where she held the anaesthetized tiger, stroking it and monitoring its condition.[4][8]
In May 2022, Yanti worked with the South Sumatra Natural Resources Conservation Center on a project to attachGPS collars to two wildSumatran elephants.[9]
Yanti is also involved with the Sumatran Tiger Conservation Forum and is on the advisory board of the Centre for Orangutan Protection.[4] She trains veterinarians in the handling and sedation of tigers. She also conducts trainings on veterinary forensics and how to manage conflicts with tigers for communities, non-governmental organisations, patrol teams, and the forestry police (SPORC).[4]