About The Author
Dr. Karen DeMatteo is a biologist that has used a broad range of techniques to understand basic biology and ecological interactions that occur at both the species and community level. She is connected to multiple US and Argentine institutions, including Washington University in St. Louis (WashU – Biology Department), the WildCare Institute at the Saint Louis Zoo, Instituto de Biología Subtropical (IBS) – nodo Posadas, Grupo de Investigación en Genetica Aplicada (GIGA), and the Universidad Nacional de Misiones – Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Químicas y Naturales (UNaM – FCEQyN). Since 2004, she has applied the use of conservation detection dogs (CDD), genetic analyses of scat, and GIS modeling to develop applied management strategies. While she historically split her time between teaching GIS at WashU (Environmental Studies Program) and field work, in 2024, she switched full-time to using this suite of noninvasive techniques to answer conservation questions. Within Misiones, Argentina, Karen is a co-Director of Proyecto Zorro Pitoco (@Got_Scat), which is a collaborative, multipronged project that uses a bottom-up approach with the goal to stop the loss of native forest, protect watersheds, promote reforestation, improve human health, and ensure long-term survival of the region's unique flora and fauna. In addition to this research focused on conserving one of the largest remnants of Atlantic Forest, she is involved with directing hands-on training courses with Argentinean students, securing the participation of private landowners in the biological corridor, and supporting the antipoaching efforts by provincial park guards. Within the U.S.A. and around the world (@AK9NoseKnows), she is involved with training/handling CDDs, as well as training CDD handlers, for conservation and environmentally driven research, with surveys across a range of species, including rare plants, amphibians, and carnivores.
While DeMatteo has written scientific articles and contributed to scientific books, as well as popular press articles, she has never ventured into a nonfiction book for young adults. However, when thinking about Train, his story went beyond the work he did in Misiones and transformed into something that could provide inspiration for young adults to overcome obstacles, see differences as special features, to not give up even when there appear to be no options, and find joy in the little things. Her experience in the scientific community, with Train as a partner in and out of the field, allows readers to become immersed in his journey. Her passion for teaching the next generation of conservationists means readers feel empowered with their new knowledge. This book provides a natural way to link his many followers, independent of whether they speak English or Spanish, and build connection among them; plus expand to include new friends. DeMatteo sees this as Train's first book, with the next version taking a simplified approach to the same concepts but aimed at younger kids who are just starting their adventure. The number of people waiting for this book is incredible, and that is just the many friends Train made around the world. The potential to reach into schools, STEM programs, zoos, dog rescue centers, veterinary persons, outdoor groups, and many more, is endless!
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