Cara Membuat Glodok Murai Batu

Cara Membuat Glodok Murai Batu

Melde dich an, um fortzufahren.

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Trubus.id — Berkat pemberian jangkrik sebagai pakan, induk dan anak murai batu kian berkualitas. Hal ini karena jangkrik memiliki kandungan nutrisi yang tinggi.

Zainal Arifin, penangkar di Kecamatan Cengkareng, Kota Jakarta Barat, rutin memberi jangkrik pada murai batu peliharaannya sebagai pakan. Ia menilai, jangkrik merupakan pakan bergizi bagi murai batu.

Hasilnya, selain induk murai batu produktif, telur yang dihasilkan pun menetas dengan baik. Pemberian jangkrik dinilai juga dapat mencegah indukan menjadi kanibal karena nutrisi yang diterima induk murai telah tercukupi. Dengan begitu, sifat kanibalnya dapat ditekan.

Menurut Dr. Ir. Burhanuddin Masyud, M.S., dosen di Departemen Konservasi Sumberdaya Hutan dan Ekowisata, Fakultas Kehutanan dan Lingkungan, Institut Pertanian Bogor, pakan merupakan unsur yang sangat penting bagi suatu organisme, termasuk murai batu.

Bahkan, pakan disebut sebagai faktor pembatas (limiting factor) bagi jaminan keberlanjutan hidup, kesehatan, serta perkembangbiakan dan produktivitas suatu organisme.

Murai batu memiliki preferensi terhadap pakan dengan karakter khusus yang direpresentasikan oleh jenis-jenis serangga kecil. Di banyak penangkaran, peternak memberikan jangkrik dan voer sebagai pakan utama.

Ada juga pemberian ulat hongkong, kroto, atau belalang sebagai pakan tambahan. Beberapa hasil penelitian menunjukkan tingkat konsumsi dan kesukaan murai batu terhadap jangkrik tergolong tinggi. Bahkan, hampir semua jangkrik yang diberikan selalu dihabiskan.

Artinya, tekstur pakan yang diberikan seperti direpresentasikan jangkrik dan jenis-jenis serangga lain terbukti sebagai pakan yang disukai dan sejauh ini banyak dijadikan sebagai pakan utama murai batu oleh banyak penangkar.

“Terkait kasus yang dilakukan Zainal Arifin, dengan fenomena atau fakta pada piyik maupun induk, tentu dapat dijadikan acuan praktis dalam penyediaan jangkrik sebagai pakan utama untuk murai batu,” kata Burhanuddin.

Pengembangan pakan jangkrik bernutrisi amat potensial. Apalagi, bila dilakukan pengujian secara saintifik. Ia menambahkan, di antara faktor penting yang harus diperhatikan di dalam pemberian pakan terkait dengan kebersihan tempat makan, kebersihan pakan, dan kesegaran pakan.

Kelengahan dalam memperhatikan hal itu berakibat fatal terhadap kondisi kesehatan burung, bahkan dapat menyebabkan kematian.

Oleh karena itu, tempat pakan harus dipastikan selalu bersih. Begitu pula dengan kondisi kesegaran pakan dan higienitas pakan. Hindari memberikan pakan yang sudah bau. Sisa pakan yang diberikan pada pagi atau sore sebaiknya segera diganti dengan pakan baru.

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Administrative village in Jakarta, Indonesia

Glodok (Chinese: 裹踱刻; pinyin: guǒ duó kè) is an urban village of Taman Sari, West Jakarta, Indonesia. The area is also known as Pecinan or Chinatown since the Dutch colonial era, and is considered the biggest in Indonesia. Majority of the traders and residents of Glodok are Chinese descent. The area dates back to colonial times when in November 1740, the Dutch East Indies Company designated Glodok as a residential area for ethnic Chinese. Administratively, the area is a kelurahan under the Taman Sari district, West Jakarta.[1]

Glodok is one of biggest trading centers for electronic goods in Jakarta.

The word Glodok came from the Sundanese word "Golodog" (Sundanese script: ᮌᮧᮜᮧᮓᮧᮌ᮪), meaning entrance to a house, as Sunda Kalapa (Jakarta) is the gateway to the ancient Sundanese Kingdom. It was also thought that the name came from the "grojok grojok" sound that water makes coming out of a waterspout in the yard of the Cityhall (Stadhuis), now the Jakarta Museum. A waterspout was built on this site in 1743 and was used for daily needs such as a watering hole for horses.[2]

In Batavia (now Jakarta), Dutch East India Company created commercial opportunities which attracted immigrants from many areas of what is now Indonesia. This economic activity also lured thousands of Chinese people to Java. Swift immigration challenged the city's limited infrastructure and created burdens on the city. Tensions grew as the colonial government tried to restrict Chinese migration through deportations.

On 9 October 1740, 5,000 Chinese were massacred and the following year, Chinese inhabitants were ghettoized in Glodok outside the city walls.[3] In 1998, Glodok was one of major areas attacked during the May 1998 riots, primarily due to tensions between pribumi and Chinese Indonesians who lived there, who were accused of hoarding the nation's wealth. In 2006, practitioners of Falun Gong were reportedly "assaulted" during a meditation session. A Falun Gong representative suggested that the assailants were sent by the Chinese embassy, though a local news organization noted another possible motivation: that Falun Gong practitioners had been "disrupting business" by distributing pamphlets.[4]

Religion in Glodok, West Jakarta (2020)

As for shopping centre, most of the vendors in Glodok are Chinese Indonesians. Glodok is the biggest Chinatown area in Indonesia, and one of the biggest Chinatowns in the world. The Chinatown covers three main areas, namely Gang Gloria (Gloria alley), Jalan Pancoran and Petak Sembilan. The Chinese came to Jakarta since the 17th century as traders and manual laborers. Most of them came from Fujian and Guangdong provinces in southern China. Centred on Pintu Besar Selatan Road, it has become a commercial hub for the relatively prosperous Chinese community. Assimilation between Chinese and pribumi made a language known as Betawi language.[5] Chinese New Year celebrations and Cap Go Meh celebrations held in the area are major attractions, after president Gus Dur began lifting restrictions in 2000. The area is now a spot to buy Chinese food, traditional Chinese medicine and cheap electronic goods.

Glodok and contiguous of Mangga Dua[6] are one of the biggest shopping centres in Southeast Asia. It stretches from Pancoran street to Gunung Sahari street and has approximately 500,000 m2 of shopping centres. Beside sales of electronic consumer goods, Glodok is also the biggest market for original and bootleg audio and video discs.

Other than shopping, Glodok is a spot to buy Chinese food, traditional Chinese medicine and cheap electronic goods. Gang Gloria is a famous place for a wide array of dishes, including gado-gado (mixed vegetables served with peanut sauce), soto betawi (beef cooked in coconut milk), ketupat sayur (rice cakes served with coconut milk and vegetables), sek ba (pork offal stewed in soy sauce) and more. Established in 1927, the legendary Kopi Es Tak Kie coffee shop specializes in iced coffee. Rujak Shanghai Encim (boiled cuttlefish, radish, cucumber, and water spinach with red sauce and peanut sprinkle) this fresh salad was established around 1950s. This kind of dish is very rare, and only able find it at Glodok.[7]

There are four old temples in the area, namely Dharma Bhakti Temple, Dharma Sakti Temple, Hui Tek Bio temple and Dharma Jaya Toasebio Temple. Kim Tek Ie Temple also known as Dharma Bhakti Temple, which was established in 1650 is the oldest temple in Jakarta.[8] Santa de Fatima Catholic Church, which is built in Chinese architecture located at Jl. Kemurnian III.

In 2016, this subdistrict was inhabited by 8,626 residents consisting of 4,407 men and 4,219 women with a sex ratio of 104.46 and 4,772 heads of families.

Then in terms of religion, the population of this sub-district is also quite diverse. Based on data from the West Jakarta City Central Statistics Agency in 2020, the number of religious adherents in this sub-district was recorded, where Buddhism was 42.8%, then Christianity 37.9% (Protestant 22.1% and Catholic 15.8%), Islam 19, 3%, and a small proportion of Hindus 0.1%.

There are many bus services provided by TransJakarta, PPD, Mayasari Bakti, and city transport. TransJakarta stops at the Glodok bus stop. Jakarta Kota, Kampung Bandan, Mangga Besar and Jayakarta stations of KRL Commuterline are located adjacent to the area.

Media related to Glodok at Wikimedia Commons

6°09′S 106°49′E / 6.150°S 106.817°E / -6.150; 106.817