Wildlife Veterinarian: Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research
Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, Inc., is accepting applications for a full-time veterinarian.
Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, Inc., is accepting applications for a full-time veterinarian.
Veterinary preceptorships are available to senior level veterinary students for a 6 to 8 week period. The program emphasizes field immobilization techniques, preventive medicine, conservation-oriented research and an international perspective.
The goal of the ODFW veterinary student externship is to introduce 4th year veterinary students via a clinical rotation, to the profession of agency-based wildlife veterinary medicine and provide a hands-on understanding of the types of tasks and activities our wildlife veterinarians engage in.
The Department of Public and Ecosystem Health in the College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell University invites applications for an Assistant/Associate Professor of Practice position as a Wildlife Veterinarian with the New York State Wildlife Health Program. This program is a partnership between the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation and the College of Veterinary Medicine.
The University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine is seeking to add two faculty members to their growing zoo medicine program.
Another eastern state has detected domestic cases of the virus affecting both wild and domestic rabbits.
The Wildlife Veterinarian will be responsible for the medical assessment, treatment, and care ofwildlife received by NWR. They will be the only full-time staff veterinarian at the Baldwin WildlifeCenter and will report to the Executive Director. This is an opportunity to build a professional,innovative veterinary program in a large wildlife […]
Minimum qualifications include ACVP or equivalent board certification or eligibility, and a DVM or equivalent degree from an AVMA-accredited veterinary college, completion of an anatomic veterinary residency training program.
Data collected from GPS collars will guide research on moose population health, mortality, and dispersal
Researchers have found skin pH to be more acidic in captive vs wild bats of a species, suggesting environmental impacts – potentially roosting substrates – on skin pH, and this may be reflected in wild bats using varying roost types across seasons.