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P.O. Box 7065
Lawrence, KS 66044-7065 USA
800-627-0326


Members

Journal of Wildlife Diseases

WDA Officers:

Charles van Riper III,
President

Lynn Creekmore,
Vice-President

Pauline Nol,
Secretary

Laurie Baeten,
Treasurer

Scott Wright,
Past President

 

 

About the Wildlife Disease Association


History of the Wildlife Disease Association

Old LogoIn March 1951, a group of 28 U.S. and Canadian wildlife biologists attending the 16th North American Wildlife Conference in Milwaukee Wisconsin, met informally for discussion and founded an organization called the Wildlife Disease Committee.

The rest, as they say, is history - eventually becoming what we know as the Wildlife Disease Association in 1952.

For a complete history of the Association, please click here.


Focus of the WDA

  • Endangered Species – WDA members with international, state, provincial, federal, and private agencies have been intimately involved in efforts to preserve and improve the status of endangered species populations.  Examples include monitoring the status of the black-footed ferret in Wyoming, USA, trying to arrest loss of Tasmanian devils associated with their facial tumor disease and investigating factors contributing to the woylie decline in West Australia.
  • Game and Furbearing Animals – Extensive research and surveillance have provided untold benefits to wildlife through private and public agencies by enhancing understanding of the impact of diseases on wild animal populations.
  • Wildlife Conservation – Many members, working as and/or with wildlife biologists, investigate the effects of environmental toxins, global warming, habitat alterations, and introduction of exotic species on the health of native wildlife.
  • Wildlife Translocation – Many members are engaged in translocation of wildlife between areas. Efforts are being made to prevent the introduction of disease and to monitor the health of the animals translocated.
  • Wildlife Rehabilitation –Veterinarians, other clinically oriented specialists and others affiliated with the WDA have been increasingly interested in the rehabilitation of sick and injured wildlife, especially rare, threatened and endangered species.
  • Zoological Parks –Zoo veterinarians supervise the care or a large variety of species and provide husbandry and veterinary care for many captive threatened and endangered species from all over the world. In addition, they work with wildlife and other resource managers on health of populations of free-ranging wildlife.
  • Public Health –WDA members contribute substantially to knowledge about arthropod-borne encephalitis, rabies, tularemia, Lyme disease, hantaviruses, plague, environmental toxicants, and many other diseases affecting human health.
  • Livestock and Poultry –Wildlife specialists participate in research, clinical and field efforts to control diseases in wildlife that may be economically devastating to domestic livestock. Among these diseases are malignant catarrhal fever, brucellosis, tuberculosis, viscerotropic velogenic Newcastle disease, and African swine fever.
  • Comparative Medicine – Many WDA members with specialty training in the health and biological sciences are involved in basic research using wildlife as models of diseases found in humans or domestic animals.
  • Ecosystem Health – Because no species exists independently of its environment many WDA members are addressing the complex issues of overall ecosystem health. One topic of special concern is aquatic animal health, as many marine mammals and sea birds serve as biomarkers for the assessment of the health of the marine environment.

Constitution and Bylaws


WDA Management Team

Management of the Wildlife Disease Association rests with several groups of people. (Contact information can be found by clicking on the titles.) These groups include:

  • Officers: The officers of the Association include President, Vice-President, Secretary, and Treasurer.
  • Council: The government and operation of the Association is vested in the Council, made up of the officers, seven Members-at-Large (i.e., six regular members and one student member), Editors, and an elected representative from each Section.
  • Editors: The editors for the Association include those for the Journal of Wildlife Diseases, the Supplement to the JWD and the web page.
  • Managers: The WDA managers include the Executive Manager and Business Manager.

WDA Recognition and Awards

The WDA gives several awards and provides funding to recognize outstanding work in wildlife health and service to the WDA. (Recipient information can be found by clicking on the award titles.)These awards include:

  • WDA Distinguished Service Award: The DSA is the highest award of the Wildlife Disease Association. The purpose of the DSA is to honor a WDA member of long standing who, by his/her outstanding accomplishments in research, teaching and other activities, including participation in WDA affairs, has made a noteworthy contribution furthering the aims of the Wildlife Disease Association.
  • WDA Emeritus Award : The Emeritus Award is an honorary category of membership awarded by the Council to members of the WDA who have retired from their profession and who in the opinion of Council have contributed significantly to the study of wildlife diseases.
  • WDA Duck Award : The Duck Award is presented to recipients to acknowledge a particularly embarrassing incident (e.g., foible/mistake) that usually occurs at the annual meeting of the WDA.
  • WDA Student Awards: The WDA offers a scholarship and two awards to encourage student participation in the Association and our annual conference, and to recognize outstanding student research.
  • Tom Thorne and Beth Williams Memorial Award: The Award is presented in acknowledgement of either an exemplary contribution or achievement combining wildlife disease research with wildlife management policy implementation or elucidating particularly significant problems in wildlife health.
  • Carlton M. Herman Founder’s Fund: The main scope of activities supported by the fund is the relation of population health and density to changes in habitat. The scope includes all animals, including the human species. Activities may include invited lectures, funding of research, presentation of medals in acknowledgement of contributions, support of publications, or other activities as determined by the trustees of the Fund. [Award Info]
  • WDA In Memoriam: This section profiles those WDA members who made significant contributions to the WDA and to wildlife and ecosystem health worldwide.

WDA Sustaining Members

The WDA is proud to recognize members and member organizations who make a significant contribution to support particular interest in the objectives of the Association as Sustaining Members. These include:

Wildlife Conservation Society, Field Veterinary Program (WCS-FVP)/Global Health Programs (WCS-GHP)
Between 2000 and 2005, the WCS-FVP made one year memberships in the Wildlife Disease Association available to more than 250 scientists in less economically developed countries of the world! Beginning in 2006, the WCS-GHP has co-sponsored with the WDA the free electronic distribution of all issues of the Journal of Wildlife Diseases to more than 110 of the lest economically developed countries of the world. The WDA greatly appreciates the contributions of the WCS-FVP and subsequently the WCS-GHP towards fulfilling the mission of the Association!

For more information on the WCS-FVP, please click here.

Copyright © 2008 Wildlife Disease Association. All rights reserved.