35 episodes

This is the podcast of the Wildlife Disease Association (WDA, https://www.wildlifedisease.org). Our host Dr Catharina Vendl chats with wildlife health professionals including researchers, vets, pathologists and more, about the joys and challenges of their job and the emerging issues of wildlife health locally and worldwide. All of our guests have a longstanding affinity with the WDA and a true passion for wildlife in common. So brush up your knowledge of current wildlife issues and One Health with Wildlife Health Talks.

Wildlife Health Talks WDA Communications Committee

    • Science
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

This is the podcast of the Wildlife Disease Association (WDA, https://www.wildlifedisease.org). Our host Dr Catharina Vendl chats with wildlife health professionals including researchers, vets, pathologists and more, about the joys and challenges of their job and the emerging issues of wildlife health locally and worldwide. All of our guests have a longstanding affinity with the WDA and a true passion for wildlife in common. So brush up your knowledge of current wildlife issues and One Health with Wildlife Health Talks.

    #35 Ruth, Marja and Katie, and the Review of Migration and Wildlife Disease Dynamics (UK)

    #35 Ruth, Marja and Katie, and the Review of Migration and Wildlife Disease Dynamics (UK)

    In the aftermath of the Covid19 pandemic, the Convention on Migratory Species of the United Nations renewed their focus on One Health and migratory species. In the wake of this renewal, researchers from the University of Edinburgh in the UK wrote a review titled "Migratory Species and Health: A Review of Migration and Wildlife Disease Dynamics, and the Health of Migratory Species, Our host Cat Vendl is joined by two of the authors, Dr Marja Kipperman and Dr Ruth Cromie. Ruth and her colleague, Katie Beckmann, presented the review at the 14th Conference of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species (CMS) in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, in February this year.
     
    Links:
    Resolution 12.6(Rev.COP14) on Wildlife Health and Migratory Species
    Migratory Species and Health Review 
    Avian Influenza (Resolution 14.18)
    Migratory Species and Health Review
    Preventing Poisoning of Migratory Birds (Resolution 11.15(Rev.COP14))
    We'd love to hear from you ... share your thoughts, feedback and ideas.

    • 29 min
    #34 Flo and the seal lice (Argentina & Antarctica)

    #34 Flo and the seal lice (Argentina & Antarctica)

    Seals have lice. This might not sound like a revolutionary fact. Many mammal species carry lice. However, as it happens, seal lice are the only marine insects that exist on this planet. In this episode, our host, Cat Vendl interviews Dr Florencia Soto about her work on the host-parasite-relationship between seals and lice and her recent trip to Antarctica. On this expedition, an international team of researchers investigated the presence and impact of High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza subtype H5 on Antarctic wildlife. And what they found was more pretty concerning. 
    Listen in to Flo’s story about the new thread to the Southern continent, the miraculous marine adaptations of seal lice and why Flo can’t get enough of the eternal ice in the far South. 
    Flo is a postdoctoral researcher at the Biology of Marine Organisms (Instituto de Biología de Organismos Marinos) in Puerto Madryn, Argentina.

    Links
    Article on HPAI Australis Expedition
    Video on Flo’s and her colleague’s work with Antarctic seal 
    We'd love to hear from you ... share your thoughts, feedback and ideas.

    • 19 min
    #33 Ai-Mei and the sika deer (Taiwan/Australia)

    #33 Ai-Mei and the sika deer (Taiwan/Australia)

    We all love to see a conservation project on a previously endangered wildlife species succeed. But what happens if a formerly small population grows to a point where its size becomes unsustainable? Performing a cull? Definitely not the most pleasant option. Our guest, Dr Ai-Mei Chang, works on a way more ethical solution: She develops and tests immuno-castration vaccines for the population control of wildlife species. In addition, she has worked on a range of infectious diseases in small wild carnivores. 
    Ai-Mei completed her degree in veterinary medicine and her PhD at the National Pingtung University of Science and Technology in Taiwan. Since Feb this year, she has been working as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Tasmania in Australia.

    Check out Ai-Mei's website here. 
    We'd love to hear from you ... share your thoughts, feedback and ideas.

    • 20 min
    #32 Simon and the otters (Germany)

    #32 Simon and the otters (Germany)

    They are small, agile, and incredibly cute and their numbers are steadily increasing in Germany. However, the Eurasian otter still faces many challenges in German waterways. Our guest, Dr Simon Rohner, studied their causes of death, their pollutant burdens, and the human-otter-conflict. Him and his colleagues have been working on solutions of how to make Germany a safer otter habitat. After his PhD at the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Simon has recently started his new position as assistant curator at Frankfurt Zoo, Germany. And luckily, they have otters there, too. 
    Join us on this otterly amazing journey into the German rivers and streams.


    Links
    https://www.otterspecialistgroup.org/osg-newsite/
    We'd love to hear from you ... share your thoughts, feedback and ideas.

    • 28 min
    #31 Tania and the pigs of Papua New Guinea

    #31 Tania and the pigs of Papua New Guinea

    Our guest this week is Papua New Guinea’s (PNG) first female vet. Dr Tania Areori is one of only three vets at the National Agriculture and Quarantine Inspection Authority (NAQIA) in PNG. One of the first challenges in her new position was managing the African swine fever outbreak.
    Tania had to work hard to get where she is now. Since she was kid, she wanted to become a vet. Not an easy task considering PNG doesn’t have a vet school. Tania had to win a prestigious scholarship to go to vet school in Australia, having to leave behind her young family. 
    Join our host Dr Cat Vendl on Tania’s remarkable journey to become PNG’s first female vet.

    Links:
    Want to learn more about Tania’s journey and work? Check out this article in the WDA’s Quarterly. 
    We'd love to hear from you ... share your thoughts, feedback and ideas.

    • 20 min
    #30 Fernado and the secrets of the Peruvian rainforest

    #30 Fernado and the secrets of the Peruvian rainforest

    Deep in the rainforest between Peru, Colombia and Brazil there is a lot going on. Wildlife trafficking is likely to blame for the occurrence of reverse zoonoses transmitted from humans to owl monkeys caught for biomedical research.
    In addition to  studying the occurrence of reverse zoonoses, our guest, Dr Fernando Vilchez Delgado, investigates the potential evolution of Flaviruses  in the making in the local primate population.

    Join our host Dr Cat Vendl and Fernando on a trip of adventure, science and true crime to one of the most remote places on earth.

    Links
    Link to the website of the NGO Entropika, Fernando's collaborator, fighting wildlife trafficking in Peru.Article about Entropika's founder Primatologist Ángela MaldonadoWe'd love to hear from you ... share your thoughts, feedback and ideas.

    • 24 min

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