The Northwest Consortium for Wildlife Conservation
Research
"New Consortium walks on the wild side"
(As published in the OSUThisWeek
Vol.38,Number 8, Oct. 29,1998
Written by: David Stauth)
Veterinary and Wildlife experts at Oregon State University are expanding
their scientific, medical and research efforts to everything from lions
to leaf-eating monkeys as part of a newly formed " Northwest Consortium
for Wildlife Conservation and Research."
A collaboration of the OSU College of Veterinary Medicine, the Oregon
Zoo at Portland, and Wildlife Safari in Wins ton, Ore., the new consortium
will let area wildlife centers tap into OSU expertise while providing broad
new research and educational opportunities for OSU faculty and students.
The initiative was founded with a $61,000, two-year grant from the M.J.
Murdock Charitable Trust, but many other funding sources, partner institutions
and activities are expected to soon evolve.
"this is a win-win situation for the Oregon zoos and OSU," said Dr.
Ursula Bechert, an OSU veterinarian and director of the new consortium.
"They will be able to take advantage of our excellent diagnostic centers,
surgeons, and expertise across the university, while our researchers and
students will gain access to many wildlife research opportunities that
wouldn't otherwise be possible."
The move is also a reflection, Bechert said, of the increasing awareness
at many zoos across the nation that they are not only a place where the
public can view wild animals, but which also hold special opportunities
and obligations for wildlife conservation, preservation and research.
And, needless to say, it opens up some unusual opportunities in student
education.
"This is mostly a research consortium focused on conservation, but students
at many levels will have educational opportunities, maybe do internships
at zoos, and explore some of the new career options in wildlife medicine
or rehabilitation," Bechert said.
"It's definitely different from learning how to care for cats or cattle,"
she said, "I've been in up to my shoulder in the rectum of an elephant
to do reproductive examinations. That's an experience you don't soon
forget."
Emerging technologies are offering new opportunities in animal research,
medicine and wildlife conservation, Bechert said. Studies in toxicology,
nutrition, reproduction, and wildlife pharmacy area all possible at the
new consortium.
Some projects already underway or planned include treating elephants
with anti-inflammatory drugs, examining the nutrition and reproduction
of elk, and exploring why black bears never get heart disease.
The research will take place at OSU and other Oregon wildlife facilities,
Bechert said, but may expand well beyond that. For instance, OSU
International Research and Development is exploring a project in which
researchers and students might trek the plains of Botswana to help study
the populations, movements and behavior of antelopes, lions, leopards and
other species.
"With the technologies we now have, researchers fan analyze the fecal
samples of an elephant or other species to identify individual animals
and learn about such things a hormone fluctuations and reproductive cycles
of animals in a wild environment," Bechert said.
OSU already has a surprisingly broad range of activities in wildlife
research and rehabilitation, she said, in such departments or colleges
as animal science, zoology, veterinary medicine, pharmacy, bio-chemistry,
biophysics, fisheries and wild, forestry and other areas. The new
consortium should improve the ability of faculty to obtain interdisciplinary
research grants.
The expertise of OSU faculty includes diverse topics such as mammalian
embryo development, the ecology of reptiles, bacterial diseases in birds,
biochemistry of bears, and evolution of immunity. Such experts can
be invaluable to area zoos and other research collaborators around the
world, Bechert said, to improve the scientific care, management and conservation
of wildlife.
"We also expect this to be very attractive to many veterinary students,"
she said. "Care of wildlife is actually a fairly small niche of veterinary
medicine, but with the increasing interest in wildlife management and conservation
it's a growing field. More and more vet schools are working in this
area."
Individual scientists from the Oregon Primate Center, Oregon Graduate
Institute, Portland State University, Oregon Coast Aquarium and OSU's Hatfield
Marine Science Center are also already involved with the new consortium,
Bechert said, and more formal arrangement with those and other institutions
may be possible in the future. |