GRADUATE STUDENTS

Laura Brubaker-Wittman

Laura Brubaker-Wittman is a PhD candidate in the Biological Anthropology program at Boston University. She holds a Master’s degree in Sustainable Development and Policy Advocacy from the School for International Training. Her doctoral research focuses on the human-nonhuman primate interface by using the mixed methodology of ethnoprimatology, incorporating theories and techniques from cultural and biological anthropology. Specifically, her work asks questions about how orangutans and humans interact and co-exist in landscapes that have been shaped by human disturbance and what this means for orangutan health and behavior. Ultimately, she hopes her work can bring together science, conservation, and environmental justice to help protect orangutans and support local communities at the same time.

Email: laurabw@bu.edu

Zoe Albert

Zoe is a PhD candidate in Biological Anthropology at Boston University. She holds a bachelor’s degree in ecology and evolutionary biology from Tulane University. In addition to this, she has an extensive background in human and animal medicine, working as a CNA, EMT and in veterinary hospitals. She fell in love with the study of primatology while researching white-faced capuchin monkeys in Santa Rosa National Park, Costa Rica. When one particularly feisty capuchin pooped directly on her head, she had a ‘Newton and the apple’ moment which inspired her to utilize feces to study the gut microbiome of primates. Through the gut microbiome, she hopes to learn more about the effects of environment, diet and sociality on primate health, energetics and wellbeing. Her dissertation research will delve into the microbiome of wild Bornean Orangutans living in Gunung Palung National Park.

Email: zealbert@bu.edu

Frank Short

Frank is a third-year PhD student in Biological Anthropology. He received his Bachelor of Science in Evolutionary Anthropology at Rutgers University, where he did research on the movement ecology of unflanged and flanged male orangutans at the site of Tuanan in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. His interests lie in the utilization of novel and rapidly developing techniques to understand areas including sexual selection, foraging, and conservation. For his dissertation research, he hopes to implement methods within the fields of movement ecology and bioacoustics to investigate the behavior and ecology of orangutans as well as their unique habitat.

Email: fshort@bu.edu

Samantha Vee

Samantha Vee is a second-year PhD student in Biological Anthropology and is broadly interested in understanding how primates respond to anthropogenic changes, with the goal of informing conservation practices. More specifically, she hopes to learn and apply methods from genetics and endocrinology to study how human disturbance affects the health and fitness of the orangutan populations in Gunung Palung National Park. Prior to joining Boston University, Samantha received her B.S. in Cell and Molecular Biology from CUNY Macaulay Honors College at John Jay College. She also received her M.A. in Ecology and Evolution from Stony Brook University, where she investigated the social and energetic costs and benefits of infant care for Phayre’s leaf monkey mothers and allomothers.

Email: svee@bu.edu

Ritika Sibal

Ritika Sibal is a first-year Master’s student, transitioning from the field of Computer Engineering, where she earned her Bachelor of Science at the University of Michigan, to the field of Biology. During her undergraduate tenure, Ritika used machine learning to analyze and interpret bottlenose dolphin swimming patterns. For her Master’s research, she will continue studying movement by exploring the ontogeny of locomotion with a specific aim to quantitatively characterize locomotor profiles by leveraging advancements in computer vision.

Email: rsibal@bu.edu

RECENT FORMER STUDENTS & BU POSTDOCS

Victoria Zdanowicz


Victoria completed her Master’s Degree in Biology in December 2023. She compared forest structure, phenology, and orangutan habitat use between primary rainforest and degraded, regenerating rainforest in Gunung Palung National Park. She was previously an undergraduate Biological Anthropology major with a minor in Ecology and Conservation Biology. Victoria’s senior honors thesis focused on orangutan nutritional and behavioral ecology. During Summer and Fall 2020, Victoria completed a UROP project on the relationship between female orangutan ranging behavior and fruit availability. Victoria currently works at Zoo New England.

Email: vrz@bu.edu

Dr. Faye Harwell

Faye was awarded her PhD in Anthropology from Boston University in May 2023 . Previously, she received a master’s degree in biology from Clark University, where she studied amphibian locomotion. She is broadly interested in orangutan growth and development. Specifically, she examined the process of flanging in male orangutans as well as the physiological and morphological changes experienced by juvenile orangutans. She is particularly interested in the hormonal changes males and females experience prior to adulthood. For her dissertation research, she used a number of methods such as photogrammetry, endocrine analyses, behavioral observations, and statistical analyses. She collaborates with zoos throughout the US for her research.

Email: fharwell@bu.edu

Dr. Erin Kane

Dr. Erin Kane was a postdoctoral research associate at Boston University She worked with Dr. Cheryl Knott on a project examining life history influences on orangutan feeding ecology in Gunung Palung National Park, West Kalimantan, Indonesia, with an emphasis on nutritional and endocrine analysis. She completed her PhD at Ohio State University in 2017. Her dissertation examined the social, ecological, and reproductive consequences of seasonal changes in food availability for Diana monkeys living in Taï National Park, Côte d’Ivoire. She is broadly interested in understanding primate responses to fluctuating food availability, particularly from socio-ecological, endocrine, and morphological perspectives. She also aims to make anthropology and primatology more inclusive and accessible sciences for a diverse group of scientists.

E-mail: erinkane@bu.edu

Website: erinelizkane.net

Dr. Andrea Blackburn

Dr. Andrea Blackburn was a Postdoctoral Associate at the Santa Barbara Zoo studying the nesting behavior, ecology, and movement of California Condors. She was a Postdoctoral Associate/Lecturer at Boston University. As part of her dissertation at Boston University, she examined the seed dispersal effectiveness and dispersal distances of Bornean orangutans in Gunung Palung National Park, Indonesia. She completed her PhD at Boston University in May 2021.

E-mail: andreabl@bu.edu

Dr. Amy Scott

Amy was awarded her PhD in Anthropology from Boston University in May 2021. Her doctoral thesis investigated behavioral measures of the mechanisms of sexual selection and genetic measures of male reproductive success to better understand the relationship between male and female reproductive strategies in Bornean orangutans. She conducted her fieldwork in Gunung Palung National Park and her genetics lab work at the Eijkman Institute for Molecular Biology in Jakarta, Indonesia. Amy is currently the Project Scientist of the Gunung Palung Orangutan Conservation Program.

Email: amscott@bu.edu

Dr. Andrea DiGiorgio

Andrea was awarded her PhD in Anthropology at Boston University in May 2019, for her study of orangutan nutrition and habitat use. Her interests are in primate evolution, diet, and conservation. She conducted her doctoral fieldwork at the Cabang Panti Research Station in Gunung Palung National Park. Andrea’s work investigated the nutrient drivers of orangutan foraging behavior, with a focus on non-fruit foods.  She is also using movement ecology to understand how these endangered apes use their habitats to find scarce resources. She currently works as a lecturer in STEM writing at the Princeton Writing Program, and as a post-doctoral researcher with Dr. Erin Vogel studying the impacts of annual fires and anthropogenic changes on orangutan behavior and physiology.

Email: andreaLD@princeton.edu

Website: https://andreaamongapes.wordpress.com/

Dr. Jacob Negrey

Jacob Negrey was awarded his PhD in Anthropology in May 2019. His doctoral research explored the relationship between health, hormonal functioning and social status in wild male chimpanzees. He conducted his work with the largest wild chimpanzee community ever studied – the Ngogo chimpanzee community, living in Kibale National Park, Uganda. He conducted laboratory analysis of chimpanzee urinary hormones in the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the School of Anthropology at The University of Arizona.

Email: jnegrey@bu.edu

Website: https://www.jacobnegrey.com/

Dr. Caitlin O’Connell

Caitlin was awarded her PhD in Anthropology from Boston University in January 2018. During her dissertation research in Gunung Palung National Park she witnessed an incredible amount of social and sexual behavior that we do not usually expect from Bornean orangutans.  Her work has explored when and why social behavior takes place in order to understand the costs and benefits of gregariousness for an ape that often ranges alone.  Her thesis looked at differences in the tendency for socializing, affiliation and agonism, stress, and parasites across different age-sex classes and examined these factors within their ecological and social contexts. She is currently the Deputy Director of the Gunung Palung Orangutan Conservation Program and a visiting research associate at Rutgers University.

Email: caito@sas.upenn.edu

Website: https://caitlinaoconnell.weebly.com/

Dr. Lara Durgavich

Lara was awarded her PhD in anthropology from Boston University in 2013. Lara’s dissertation research investigated ovarian function, mating behaviors, and life history in captive orangutans. Lara currently lectures on topics including evolutionary medicine, primate evolution and behavior, human biological variation at Harvard University, Boston University, and Tufts University. Watch her TedTalk on an evolutionary perspective on human health and disease.

Twitter: @tinkeringprim8

Harvard & Boston University Graduate and Post-doc Advisees and Co-Advisees:

  • Meg Crofoot (Director at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, Professor at the University of Konstanz)
  • Zarin Machanda (Assistant Professor of Anthropology & Assistant Professor of Biology at Tufts University, Director of Long-term Research at the Kibale Chimpanzee Project University)
  • Emily Barrett
  • Katarina Mucha (Lecturer of Public Health, Central Washington Univ.)
  • Sonya Kahlenberg (Executive Director, Gorilla Rehabilitation and Conservation Education (GRACE) Center)
  • Melissa Emery Thompson (Associate Professor & Interim Assistant Vice President for Research, Co-Director of the Comparative Human and Primate Physiology Center at Univ. of New Mexico)
  • Matthew McIntyre (Director of Data Collection at 23andMe)
  • Peter Gray (Professor of Anthropology, Univ. of Nevada, Las Vegas)
  • Judith Flynn Chapman
  • Meredith Bastian (Curator of Primates at National Zoological Park & Recruiting Editor at the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS))
  • Gail Campbell-Smith (Research & Conservation Programme Development Advisor at International Animal Rescue (IAR)).
  • Rebecca M. Stumpf (Professor of Anthropology at Univ. of Illinois)