Fellowship for “Mr Frog man”

Individual Alumni News
5 March 2015

Gilbert Adum Baase (TBA field course, Amani 2010) co-founder and Executive Director of the Ghanian NGO Save the Frogs  has won a  prestigious German Alexander von Humboldt International Climate Protection Fellowship, 2014. Gilbert will spend a year in Germany developing his research that will focus on “Forecasting impacts of climate change on Ghanaian frogs”.

Quick to acknowledge the role of TBA in his success, Gilbert said: “there is no doubt TBA training is the cradle of my success in academia and in life, without any exaggeration. Even to date, I continue to get additional professional support from Dr. Rosie (Rosie Trevelyan — TBA Director), Markus Eichhorn (Lecturer in ecology at the University of Nottingham, UK, and  specialist teacher on the TBA field course in Amani 2010) and all of you in one way or another.”.

This fellowship is a huge boost, not only to Gilbert’s career, but also to SAVE THE FROGS! Ghana – an organisation founded by TBA alumni in Ghana. The award will help expand research projects supported by TBA to conserve Ghana’s endangered amphibians and their habitats. As SAVE THE FROGS! Ghana continues to make real impact in conservation, it has received financial support towards its work as a results of publicity the TBA has shared on the organisation.

Congratulations Gilbert! TBA wishes you (and SAVE THE FROGS! Ghana) all the best as you continue protecting amphibian populations and promoting a society that respects and appreciates nature and wildlife.

Latest News

TBA’s first course in Portuguese

TBA’s first course in Portuguese

The Tropical Biology Association is pleased to announce that it will be running its first field course in Guinea Bissau this autumn in partnership with CIBIO (Research Centre in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources), from University of Porto, Portugal. This course will...

Citizen Science course

Citizen Science course

The Tropical Biology Association is calling for applications from African conservation scientists for an in-person course to be held in Nairobi over five days in December. Analyzing citizen science data, and communicating results is designed for African conservation...

Data analysts wanted

The Tropical Biology Association requires data analysts (two in Kenya, and two in Nigeria) to join a new project aimed at improving the use of citizen science data in decision making in East and West Africa, and funded by a grant from the Darwin Initiative of the UK...