1 / 18

Team BLAZE Bettering the lives of animals in zOo environments

Logan Anbinder, Amy Cordell, Gretchen Downey, Kelly Freudenberger, Shabaab Kamal, Nikko Khuc, Josh Lacey, Caitlin Moore, Emmarie Myers, Andrea Schmidt Mentor: Dr. Kaci Thompson. Team BLAZE Bettering the lives of animals in zOo environments. Research Questions.

glynis
Download Presentation

Team BLAZE Bettering the lives of animals in zOo environments

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Logan Anbinder, Amy Cordell, Gretchen Downey, Kelly Freudenberger, Shabaab Kamal, Nikko Khuc, Josh Lacey, Caitlin Moore, Emmarie Myers, Andrea Schmidt Mentor: Dr. Kaci Thompson Team BLAZEBettering the lives of animals in zOo environments

  2. Research Questions How does enrichment implementation vary among zoological institutions? What is the impact of instituting a comprehensive enrichment schedule on endocrine measures of stress?

  3. Why? • The primary purposes of zoos are education, conservation, and research. • Captive animals are better representations of their wild counterparts when they exhibit natural behaviors. • Felids are especially susceptible to illness and reduced fecundity when subjected to high levels of stress.

  4. Why? • There is variability among zoos in their financial and human resources, and therefore their enrichment programs. • A zoo with less resources may not be able to give felids the most effective enrichments. • Without enrichment, stress levels increase.

  5. Prediction • We expect to see an initial difference between the patterns of fecal corticoid levels of the felids at a small zoo (Catoctin) vs. those at a zoo with more resources (the National Zoo). • Following implementation of the National Zoo’s enrichment at the Catoctin Zoo, we expect the patterns of fecal corticoids to be comparable between the felids of both zoos.

  6. Methodology

  7. Summer 2010 • Collected fecal samples from 3 lions and 2 tigers at the National Zoo • Obtained enrichment logs for the felids • Type of enrichment • Weekly schedule • Modified the methodology • Focus on cross-institutional comparison • Established contact with Catoctin Zoo

  8. Current Status • Lyophilizing samples at the National Zoo which will be sent to and analyzed at the Smithsonian Biology Conservation Institute. • Drafting a survey to be sent to zoos nationwide regarding common enrichment techniques.

  9. Future Plans • Fall 2010: send out survey by December 18 • Spring 2011: - begin analyzing endocrine data - analyze results from the survey starting in March - determine enrichment(s) we will implement at the Catoctin Zoo

  10. Future Plans • Summer 2011: - collect baseline data from the Catoctin felids - implement enrichment at the Catoctin Zoo and collect fecal samples - analyze fecal samples to determine patterns and effects of enrichments

  11. Timeline

  12. Goals • Receive feedback from 75% of survey recipients • Recommend easily implementable enrichment for small zoos • Publish findings in a zoological journal

  13. Challenges • Collaboration with the zoo • Obtaining funding for fecal analysis

  14. Team Roles • Zoo liaisons • National Zoo – Logan • Catoctin Zoo – Gretchen • Front Royal – Caitlin • Financial liaison – Kelly • Team Liaison – Logan • Secretary – Amy • “Enforcer” – Josh • Technology coordinator – Shabaab

  15. Committees • Literature Review • Nikko, Andrea, Emmarie • Grants • Caitlin, Gretchen, Josh • Editing • Amy, Emmarie, Kelly • Survey • Josh, Logan, Kelly, Nikko

  16. Advice for Freshmen • Establish communication with collaborators early • Don’t become complacent – your project may change • Start applying for grants early • Be persistent- phone calls are better than emails • Implement and enforce team structure

  17. Conclusion • We are in the process of analyzing samples for fecal corticoid levels • We are creating a survey to distribute • We are finalizing our methodology with the Catoctin Zoo

  18. Questions?

More Related