Board of DIRECTORS
Pursuant to the bylaws of our non-profit corporation, our board meets four times a year via teleconference to make sure our efforts stay true to our mission. We currently have a board consisting of both U.S. and Costa Rican members with three officers. We take keeping the flame alive from the original intent of our young founders very seriously, making sure that we always have the welfare of the animals of the rainforest a priority, and are extremely grateful to our former board members, our volunteers, supporters and employees who make our work possible. Pura Vida and Thank you!

Jennifer Rice, Ph.D. – Co-Founder
KSTR HQ, Costa Rica
jennifer@kidssavingtherainforest.org
Jennifer Rice, AA, BA, MS, PhD, and working on a MBA, is a professional student plus more. Jennifer moved to Costa Rica with her 4-year-old daughter in 1993. Her daughter, Janine, became interested in the rainforest and founded KSTR in 1999 when she was 9 years old. Jennifer has been President since the founding and has been very active in every stage of its growth. Projects under Jennifer's supervision include, animal rescue, release, providing sanctuary for animals who cannot be released, monkey bridges, education, research, sanctuary tours, reforestation, media communication, volunteer program, and community outreach.Jennifer is passionate about saving the rainforest and everything in it! She foresees an ever-expanding future for KSTR!
KSTR HQ, Costa Rica
jennifer@kidssavingtherainforest.org
Jennifer Rice, AA, BA, MS, PhD, and working on a MBA, is a professional student plus more. Jennifer moved to Costa Rica with her 4-year-old daughter in 1993. Her daughter, Janine, became interested in the rainforest and founded KSTR in 1999 when she was 9 years old. Jennifer has been President since the founding and has been very active in every stage of its growth. Projects under Jennifer's supervision include, animal rescue, release, providing sanctuary for animals who cannot be released, monkey bridges, education, research, sanctuary tours, reforestation, media communication, volunteer program, and community outreach.Jennifer is passionate about saving the rainforest and everything in it! She foresees an ever-expanding future for KSTR!

Margaret Franzen Levin
Davis, California
Maggie Franzen Levin is an experienced researcher and teacher of various aspects of conservation and anthropology focusing on connections between ecology, economics and culture. She has a strong interest in the tropics and enjoys the beauty of the Manuel Antonio area of Costa Rica by owning property near the KSTR Wildlife Rescue and Sanctuary. Dr. Levin is a Fulbright Scholar who studied hunting among the Huaorani in Ecuador’s Yasuni National Park. She earned a Ph.D. from UC Davis with her project titled “Huaorani Resource Use in the Ecuadorian Amazon: Hunting, Food Sharing, and Market Participation.” She has been a lecturer for the UC Davis Anthropology Department and is a former environmental educator. Dr. Levin has published in Ecological Economics, Environmental Conservation and Conservation Biology and is currently writing a book about her time spent with the Huaorani. She also enjoys volunteering teaching plant biology and insect life cycles through the garden program at Cesar Chavez Elementary School in Davis CA.
Davis, California
Maggie Franzen Levin is an experienced researcher and teacher of various aspects of conservation and anthropology focusing on connections between ecology, economics and culture. She has a strong interest in the tropics and enjoys the beauty of the Manuel Antonio area of Costa Rica by owning property near the KSTR Wildlife Rescue and Sanctuary. Dr. Levin is a Fulbright Scholar who studied hunting among the Huaorani in Ecuador’s Yasuni National Park. She earned a Ph.D. from UC Davis with her project titled “Huaorani Resource Use in the Ecuadorian Amazon: Hunting, Food Sharing, and Market Participation.” She has been a lecturer for the UC Davis Anthropology Department and is a former environmental educator. Dr. Levin has published in Ecological Economics, Environmental Conservation and Conservation Biology and is currently writing a book about her time spent with the Huaorani. She also enjoys volunteering teaching plant biology and insect life cycles through the garden program at Cesar Chavez Elementary School in Davis CA.

Chip Braman – Treasurer
KSTR HQ, Costa Rica
chip@kstr.org
Chip Braman (Grenville Chapin Braman Jr) was raised internationally in South America. He was an award winning golfer at a young age, and went on to be the captain on the golf team at Woodbury Forest Prep School, and again at Williams College. After graduating college he worked for 32 years with Avon as the International Marketing Director. When he retired he came to Costa Rica in 2000 to save the rainforest, animals, to be part of KSTR and to marry the president of KSTR.
If you know Chip at all, you know he will help you no matter what. If you stay at the Blue Banyan Inn, as this man approaches you be prepared to be entertained. He has a lot of great stories about the good ol days of KSTR when they would rescue animals and keep them at their previously owned Hotel Mono Azul. Chip is an integral part of KSTR because if we need something built for the sanctuary, he’s our guy to find the right person to do it!
KSTR HQ, Costa Rica
chip@kstr.org
Chip Braman (Grenville Chapin Braman Jr) was raised internationally in South America. He was an award winning golfer at a young age, and went on to be the captain on the golf team at Woodbury Forest Prep School, and again at Williams College. After graduating college he worked for 32 years with Avon as the International Marketing Director. When he retired he came to Costa Rica in 2000 to save the rainforest, animals, to be part of KSTR and to marry the president of KSTR.
If you know Chip at all, you know he will help you no matter what. If you stay at the Blue Banyan Inn, as this man approaches you be prepared to be entertained. He has a lot of great stories about the good ol days of KSTR when they would rescue animals and keep them at their previously owned Hotel Mono Azul. Chip is an integral part of KSTR because if we need something built for the sanctuary, he’s our guy to find the right person to do it!

Janine Licare – Co-Founder
San Francisco, California
Janine Licare’s journey in environmental activism and founding Kids Saving the Rainforest is truly remarkable. At the young age of four, she and her mother left the US and settled in Costa Rica. With only having nine other students in her high school graduating class, she was the first to go to college in the US from her high school and was accepted to Stanford University.
Upon graduating from Stanford she taught in the inner city of Inglewood, California with Teach for America. Janine founded KSTR in 1999 when she was only nine years old after seeing first-hand that the rainforest needed help. With her mother and her friend she created the KSTR gift shop in Manuel Antonio where 100% of the proceeds from locally created items are sold to tourists to raise awareness and funds for the organization. The money raised contributes to preserving the local rainforest land, rehabilitating baby and injured animals, and supporting a wildlife sanctuary and rescue center.
The next phase for Janine and KSTR was to support the growth of the Wildlife Rehabilitation & Educational Center and to study and create proper living environments for some of the rarest species of monkeys left on our planet, including the Titi, Howler, and Spider monkey.
Janine (through KSTR) has been featured in many publications, shows, and more including Teen People, Teen Magazine, National Geographic for Kids; numerous books including Scholastic; and TV shows on BBC, National Geographic Earth Pulse, among others. Janine’s passion and engaging smile has inspired many young people to help her and KSTR help the animals of the rainforest.
San Francisco, California
Janine Licare’s journey in environmental activism and founding Kids Saving the Rainforest is truly remarkable. At the young age of four, she and her mother left the US and settled in Costa Rica. With only having nine other students in her high school graduating class, she was the first to go to college in the US from her high school and was accepted to Stanford University.
Upon graduating from Stanford she taught in the inner city of Inglewood, California with Teach for America. Janine founded KSTR in 1999 when she was only nine years old after seeing first-hand that the rainforest needed help. With her mother and her friend she created the KSTR gift shop in Manuel Antonio where 100% of the proceeds from locally created items are sold to tourists to raise awareness and funds for the organization. The money raised contributes to preserving the local rainforest land, rehabilitating baby and injured animals, and supporting a wildlife sanctuary and rescue center.
The next phase for Janine and KSTR was to support the growth of the Wildlife Rehabilitation & Educational Center and to study and create proper living environments for some of the rarest species of monkeys left on our planet, including the Titi, Howler, and Spider monkey.
Janine (through KSTR) has been featured in many publications, shows, and more including Teen People, Teen Magazine, National Geographic for Kids; numerous books including Scholastic; and TV shows on BBC, National Geographic Earth Pulse, among others. Janine’s passion and engaging smile has inspired many young people to help her and KSTR help the animals of the rainforest.

Janette Wallis
Norman, Oklahoma
Janette Wallis serves as co-Vice Chair of the International Union for Conservation of Nature Species Survival Commission’s Primate Specialist Group—Africa and is the Editor-in-Chief of the journal African Primates. She is also a board member of the Society for Conservation Biology – Africa Section, serves on the Scientific Board of the Plastic Pollution Coalition, and recently completed 10-years as the Vice President for Conservation of the International Primatological Society. Janette directs the Kasokwa-Kityedo Forest Project in Uganda, a group of forest fragments home to chimpanzees, baboons, and several other wildlife species. Research at the site focuses on behavioral ecology, reproduction, conservation, and human-wildlife interactions. Janette earned her Ph.D. in an interdisciplinary program combining zoology, psychology, and anthropology from the University of Oklahoma, where she teaches wildlife conservation courses for the Environmental Studies program.
Norman, Oklahoma
Janette Wallis serves as co-Vice Chair of the International Union for Conservation of Nature Species Survival Commission’s Primate Specialist Group—Africa and is the Editor-in-Chief of the journal African Primates. She is also a board member of the Society for Conservation Biology – Africa Section, serves on the Scientific Board of the Plastic Pollution Coalition, and recently completed 10-years as the Vice President for Conservation of the International Primatological Society. Janette directs the Kasokwa-Kityedo Forest Project in Uganda, a group of forest fragments home to chimpanzees, baboons, and several other wildlife species. Research at the site focuses on behavioral ecology, reproduction, conservation, and human-wildlife interactions. Janette earned her Ph.D. in an interdisciplinary program combining zoology, psychology, and anthropology from the University of Oklahoma, where she teaches wildlife conservation courses for the Environmental Studies program.

Scott Braman
Los Angeles, California
Scott Braman is an award-winning filmmaker and environmental consultant. Scott began his career as a Fulbright Scholar living and working in the Ecuadorian Amazon studying among the indigenous Huaorani people. Scott has since directed and edited hundreds of short films and a number of feature-length documentaries. Scott has worked with a myriad of high-profile clients including the Ford Motor Company, Conservation International, Overseas Development Institute, and the Environmental Litigation Group. His films have been broadcast on the National Geographic Channel and have screened at the United Nations, Harvard University, and San Francisco’s Exploratorium Museum. Scott was a Magna Cum Laude graduate of Dartmouth College where he studied Environmental Biology and Anthropology and currently lives with his wife and young daughter in Los Angeles.
Los Angeles, California
Scott Braman is an award-winning filmmaker and environmental consultant. Scott began his career as a Fulbright Scholar living and working in the Ecuadorian Amazon studying among the indigenous Huaorani people. Scott has since directed and edited hundreds of short films and a number of feature-length documentaries. Scott has worked with a myriad of high-profile clients including the Ford Motor Company, Conservation International, Overseas Development Institute, and the Environmental Litigation Group. His films have been broadcast on the National Geographic Channel and have screened at the United Nations, Harvard University, and San Francisco’s Exploratorium Museum. Scott was a Magna Cum Laude graduate of Dartmouth College where he studied Environmental Biology and Anthropology and currently lives with his wife and young daughter in Los Angeles.

Barbara Thompson
Quepos, Costa Rica
Barbara Thompson has been helping out with the sanctuary from the beginning, when it was brand new with the core group of marmosets we first received. She has hand raised several marmosets due to neglect from their Mom and Dad. Barbara finds life in Costa Rica working closely with Kids Saving the Rainforest to be a welcome change from the pace in the US as a flight attendant for many years. Barb’s love for monkeys is out of this world!
She is also Co-Owner of Blue Banyan Inn (where KSTR is located) with her brother Chip Braman, KSTR President Jennifer Rice and her dedicated husband Jim Thompson.
Barb is also one of the tour guides for our sanctuary tour. She has a wonderful collection of stories about the animals from her personal experience working with and living in the neighborhood with our rescue and sanctuary animals. If we have a baby monkey, Barbs becomes “Super Monkey Mom!"
Quepos, Costa Rica
Barbara Thompson has been helping out with the sanctuary from the beginning, when it was brand new with the core group of marmosets we first received. She has hand raised several marmosets due to neglect from their Mom and Dad. Barbara finds life in Costa Rica working closely with Kids Saving the Rainforest to be a welcome change from the pace in the US as a flight attendant for many years. Barb’s love for monkeys is out of this world!
She is also Co-Owner of Blue Banyan Inn (where KSTR is located) with her brother Chip Braman, KSTR President Jennifer Rice and her dedicated husband Jim Thompson.
Barb is also one of the tour guides for our sanctuary tour. She has a wonderful collection of stories about the animals from her personal experience working with and living in the neighborhood with our rescue and sanctuary animals. If we have a baby monkey, Barbs becomes “Super Monkey Mom!"

Lauren Wendle
Tarrytown, New York
Lauren Wendle is currently the President of the Lucie Foundation and an independent business consultant. From 2010 until January of 2018, Lauren worked for Emerald Expositions leading the Photography Group as Vice President and Group Publisher of the largest collection of magazines, websites, and trade shows geared toward professional photography in North America. As Vice President, Ms. Wendle coordinated editorial, sales and promotional activities for all magazines including Photo District News and Rangefinder magazine and oversaw all aspects of the two largest annual photography shows in North America: PhotoPlus Expo, and the Wedding & Portrait Photographers International (WPPI).
Prior to joining Photo District News in 2010, Ms. Wendle served as Director at Advertising Photographers of America (APA), the national association for professional and advertising photographers, and as Director of Photography at the Image Bank, the largest and most respected photo archives library of its time.
Currently, she also acts as the President of the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund, serves on the Eddie Adams Workshop Board, Kids Saving the Rainforest, and is a board member and volunteer running an art program for undocumented immigrant children at the Abbott House with her daughters, Lily and Katie. Lauren Wendle is a native and current resident of Tarrytown, New York.
Lauren Wendle
Tarrytown, New York
Lauren Wendle is currently the President of the Lucie Foundation and an independent business consultant. From 2010 until January of 2018, Lauren worked for Emerald Expositions leading the Photography Group as Vice President and Group Publisher of the largest collection of magazines, websites, and trade shows geared toward professional photography in North America. As Vice President, Ms. Wendle coordinated editorial, sales and promotional activities for all magazines including Photo District News and Rangefinder magazine and oversaw all aspects of the two largest annual photography shows in North America: PhotoPlus Expo, and the Wedding & Portrait Photographers International (WPPI).
Prior to joining Photo District News in 2010, Ms. Wendle served as Director at Advertising Photographers of America (APA), the national association for professional and advertising photographers, and as Director of Photography at the Image Bank, the largest and most respected photo archives library of its time.
Currently, she also acts as the President of the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund, serves on the Eddie Adams Workshop Board, Kids Saving the Rainforest, and is a board member and volunteer running an art program for undocumented immigrant children at the Abbott House with her daughters, Lily and Katie. Lauren Wendle is a native and current resident of Tarrytown, New York.
Rehabbers & Vets
Kids Saving The Rainforest operates both a Wildlife Sanctuary and Wildlife Rescue Center which together have hosted over 25 species of primates and other rainforest animals. Our highly skilled Veterinarian, Dr. Carmen Soto and our extremely dedicated Biologist & Regente, Yeimy Gamboa, along with our Nursery/Rehab Manager & Social Media Coordinator, Dani Dion, have done a remarkable job of managing the center, along with our support staff, interns and volunteers.
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Touring our Wildlife Sanctuary or volunteering will give you a glimpse into how our staff and volunteers effectively face the challenges of tropical animal veterinary in a bountifully enriched rainforest environment for animals who can never be released as well.
Our mission specific species, the grey capped subspecies of red-backed squirrel monkey, (citrinellus), commonly called the mono titi in Costa Rica, was identified as a separate subspecies by Dr. Sue Boinski after many years of research and was identified as critically endangered at the time we embarked on our mission to help them become a healthier population in the Manuel Antonio area. We are very proud of the fact that recent studies by wildlife biologist Lenin Rosales in Manuel Antonio have shown 20% increases in the size of some troops in the last couple of years, plus the size of the subspecies population has increased from 1200 in 2001 to about 3000 individuals in 2009! This is great news which shows our monkey bridges as well as continuing to provide more consistent areas of habitat and corridors between them are contributing toward saving the Titis. |
Explore our volunteer page to learn about the opportunity to work with our full-time wildlife veterinarian and help monitor, observe, and care for the wild animals that we host. Experience the satisfaction of helping these animals personally!
We hope to see you soon! |