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Meet the Team  
Dave Blackburn
Birthday: September 20, 1979
Hobbies: Running, reading, hiking, cooking, and herping
As a kid I liked: baseball, reading, and getting dirty
Favorite Cameroonian Food: Koki (ground corn with spices and pepper that is cooked in leaves; similar to a Mexican tamale)
David Blackburn

Dave Blackburn is a fifth year Ph.D. student in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University. He spends most of his days studying frogs in the herpetology collections of Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology or conducting research in the laboratory of his main advisor, Dr. James Hanken. Dave’s main research interests, in no particular order, are amphibians, evolutionary biology, and Africa. He first became interested in Africa when he joined Dr. Paul Sereno’s expedition to Niger in 2000. Since then, he’s led small field research teams in both Malawi and Cameroon. This year will mark Dave’s second trip to Cameroon and his fifth trip to Africa.

Dave Blackburn’s Web Site
http://www.oeb.harvard.edu/hanken/public_html/Blackburn.htm

Read an interview with Dave on the Dinosaur Expedition 2000 web site

Katie Blackburn
Birthday: April 6, 1979
Hobbies: Cooking, reading, hiking
As a kid I liked: playing with her cats, playing in the yard with her sister, reading, and going to school.

Katie is currently finishing up her Masters of Science at Harvard’s School of Public Health. Her academic focus is on nutrition and poverty.

Katie Blackburn

While Katie has done her fair share of traveling, including a recent month-long trip to Bangladesh, this is her first trip to Africa. She likely knows more about amphibians than anyone else at the public health school! Katie and Dave are resident tutors and advisors to undergraduates in Harvard’s Dunster House.

Divine Fotibu
Favorite Cameroonian Food: achoo (a spicy soup)

Divine is the driver for the team, but he is also a great mechanic and cook. Divine lives in Yaoundé where he is usually a driver for a local conservation organization, but he hails from near the town of Bamenda in Cameroon’s Northwest province. Dave met Divine while working in Cameroon in 2004. Divine speaks multiple languages and his driving and mechanic skills are extremely important to the success of our fieldwork!

Nono Gonwouo

Nono is a local expert on Cameroonian reptiles and received his master’s degree in herpetology from the University of Yaoundé several years ago. Dave worked with Nono during previous fieldwork in Cameroon. Nono has traveled widely in Cameroon and is skilled at navigating politics at both the national and village level. He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in herpetology (on chameleons) with Dr. Marc-Oliver Rödel from the University of Wurzburg in Germany. He has just recently returned to Cameroon from California where he was taking courses on global information systems (GIS).

Pien Huang
Birthday: April 02, 1984
Hobbies: reading, writing, rock-climbing As a kid I liked: decorating with glitter, playing in water, and beating the Oregon Trail

Pien graduated from college in June, and she will spend a year traveling with, and writing about, scientists. Pien is short, and is often mistaken for being twelve when she is, in fact, twenty-two. She prefers to be outdoors, and worries sometimes about deep and bottomless waters. She loves trying different foods and meeting new people, and recommends that you pay attention in Geography.

Marcel Talla

Marcel is a teacher at a secondary school in Douala, Cameroon. He has conducted field surveys for reptiles in many parts of Camerooon as part of the CAMHERP project. He will be joining us for many of our trips into the field.

Marcel Talla
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All photos and text by D.C. Blackburn unless otherwise noted
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