Archive for February, 2010

MAF Awards Three Veterinary Student Scholars Program Participants

Friday, February 26th, 2010

On Saturday, February 20, 2010, Morris Animal Foundation awarded first, second and third place Ballard Awards to participants in the Veterinary Student Scholars program. Ballard Awards are funds set aside by Morris Animal Foundation to award the best veterinary student projects in the areas of wildlife, small companion animal and large companion animal health. The award ceremony took place during the Morris Animal Foundation Wildlife Meeting held at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco and was attended by Foundation trustees, staff, veterinary students and wildlife advisory board members.

Twenty-four students received Veterinary Student Scholar grants to perform wildlife research in 2009, 18 of whom were present in San Francisco to present their research. The Veterinary Student Scholars program offers stipend support for veterinary and non-veterinary graduate students in animal science who wish to perform research in the area of animal health. The winners are listed below:

viviana-gonzalez1

1st Place ($5,000) – Viviana Gonzalez, University of La Salle (Colombia), “Frequency of Antibodies Against Leptospira interrogans in Primates of Family Cebidae in Two Zoos of Colombia”

janessa-gjeltema

2nd Place ($2,500) – Janessa Gjeltema, North Carolina State University, “Assessment of PAH Contamination in Puerto Rican Crested Toad Breeding Pool Using SPMD Technology”

janis-hooge

3rd Place ($1,500) – Janis Hooge, Massey University (New Zealand), “Detection of Tick-borne Pathogens in Grant’s Gazelles: Using Molecular Techniques to Gain Basic Health Knowledge About an Important Antelope”

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Watch Betty White accept her Lifetime Achievement Award from MAF

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

The event was a great success! Click here to watch the video and read more about the event.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

MAF honors Betty White

Friday, February 12th, 2010

betty-white-bw12

Morris Animal Foundation honors Betty White for improving animal health.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Join MAF at the 2nd Annual K9 Cancer Walk in Elk Grove, Calif.

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Join Morris Animal Foundation at the 2nd Annual K9 Cancer Walk in Elk Grove, Calif.
All proceeds will benefit Morris Animal Foundation’s Canine Cancer Campaign

Dogs are a part of our families, but our “best friends” can get sick, just like us. Join Morris Animal Foundation (MAF) on Saturday, April 24, 2010, at Elk Grove Regional Park to celebrate your best friend or to honor the memory of your best friend at the 2nd Annual K9 Cancer Walk benefiting MAF’s Canine Cancer Campaign. This is one of a series of walks in 2010 that MAF will host around the nation to help dogs enjoy longer, healthier, cancer-free lives.

Register online at www.K9CancerWalk.org. Register by April 10th to benefit from the early registration fee of $30 for adults and $15 for kids 10 and under. This year’s walk includes options for a 3K and 7K walk, an animal health educational program and an opportunity drawing. Teams will also have a chance to compete for spirit and participation awards.

Dog lovers from around the country can also participate by choosing the Sit & Stay for a Cure option to virtually participate in the 2nd annual K9 Cancer Walk. You can help dogs enjoy longer, healthier lives from the comfort of your couch!

“Our goal is to raise awareness of this epidemic and to provide a means of coming together as a community for dog owners whose lives have been affected by canine cancer,” says Tish Czachor, MAF’s canine cancer events manager. “Each walk will bring us one step closer in finding a cure for our best friends.”

Through the Canine Cancer Campaign, Morris Animal Foundation is creating a healthier tomorrow for dogs. Research funded through the campaign will help develop prevention strategies, test new treatments, establish tools for cancer researchers and train new scientists specializing in cancer research. By supporting this campaign, you can help to one day cure this disease that affects so many of our best friends.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Saving Endangered Amphibians

Monday, February 1st, 2010

A New Game of Leapfrog: Giving Amphibian Populations a Boost
By Heather Grimshaw

Frogs—and other amphibians, such as toads and salamanders—are declining in numbers, and in some areas of the world they are becoming extinct. Although many speculate on the reasons for the decline in these critical animals, a Morris Animal Foundation-funded researcher has devised a solution for at-risk species in captivity: in vitro fertilization (IVF).

With ongoing Foundation support, Dr. Andrew Kouba has spent countless hours developing and perfecting artificial insemination techniques for endangered amphibians. The big payoff came with the recent release of 30,000 tadpoles—5,000 conceived through IVF—which represents a major step toward survival for species in rapid decline. It is the second time endangered amphibians produced through IVF were released into the wild. And the techniques Dr. Kouba developed could help save countless amphibian species around the world.

Sadly, many amphibian species, including the Colorado boreal toads, Mississippi gopher frogs and Wyoming toads Dr. Kouba studies, are dwindling at an alarming rate because of disease and loss of habitat. All three species are endangered.

Although some people may wonder how an amphibian decline could affect humans and the planet, Dr. Kouba easily completes the one-health circle: The algae tadpoles eat would pollute water if it were not consumed, the insects amphibians eat would increase exponentially and amphibians are important prey for snakes, lizards, birds and small mammals. If amphibians were to disappear, Dr. Kouba says, “There would be a domino effect all the way up and down the food chain.”

Beyond their ecological importance, amphibians hold a special place in Dr. Kouba’s heart-he’s been fascinated with them ever since childhood. A scientist who studies many types of wildlife at the Memphis Zoo, Dr. Kouba still has a keen appreciation for amphibians, which often provide children with their first connection to nature.

“Everyone should have frogs at home!” Dr. Kouba says.

Yet the reality is that most people do not have frogs at home—nor do they realize their ecological importance—and there is an alarming loss of diversity within the species. The overall outlook for amphibians is somewhat bleak. Not only are they reproducing less frequently, but scientists are also seeing more abnormalities in existing populations, which is why research funded by the Foundation is so important.

The goal of Dr. Kouba’s IVF project was to maintain genetic diversity within captive assurance colonies, to increase amphibian numbers for reintroduction and to establish a protocol that could be shared with zoos across the country. The work established novel hormone methods for the induction of ovulation and sperm collection and culminated in egg collections from females that were fertilized by sometimes up to 10 different males.

The successful protocol will help zoos, aquariums and state and federal agencies better manage their captive amphibian populations and release greater numbers of animals back to the wild, which is especially rewarding to Dr. Kouba.

“We’re starting off on a good foot,” he explains. “We have research in place and the background needed, thanks to Morris Animal Foundation grants, to produce thousands of endangered animals with this technology!”

Please support critical wildlife health research. Donate today.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark
make a donation