Prince Adu-Tutu
Founder/Executive Director
Prince Adu-Tutu is a young, uprising conservation scientist with a special interest in fauna and flora biodiversity conservation. Prince is currently pursuing an MPhil. Wildlife Management and holds a BSc. Natural Resources Management from the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Ghana. He served as a national service personnel in the Department of Wildlife and Range Management (KNUST), where he worked as a teaching and research assistant. He has served as a principal researcher on several projects including; the conservation of T. gentii in southern Ghana, and team member on the Conservation of the rare, Endangered and EDGE-listed Hylomyscus baeri in southern Ghana. Prince has volunteered with several NGOs including A Rocha Ghana, Herpetology Conservation Ghana (Herp Ghana) and Save Ghana Frogs where he acquired experience in biodiversity conservation and ecological surveys. His volunteering works in conservation activities are also creditable by organising Conservation Day Out in senior high schools and being part of the team from SAVE THE FROGS! Ghana, who introduced alternative livelihood of beekeeping to the people of Yawkrom, a fringe community of the Sui River Forest Reserve, Ghana.
He is a Commission Member of the IUCN SSC Small Mammal Specialist Group, and IUCN SSC West and Central Africa.