Dear Friends of the Cornell K. Lisa Yang Center for Wildlife Health,
This newsletter is a bit later than we’d hoped, but for good reasons! We’ve been moving full speed ahead to stand-up our new K. Lisa Yang Wildlife Health Fellows Program, which includes postdoctoral fellowships focused on conservation impact around the world (with final interviews for our inaugural class of fellows occurring this month and next!), two new PhD fellowships (applications now open!) as well as a new Residency in Wildlife Population Health currently accepting applicants– all as part of our commitment to train the next generation of wildlife conservation and One Health leaders. And then there is our new Catalyzing Conservation Fund internal grants program, to help jump-start impact-focused conservation work around the world.
Relatedly, we’re extremely excited to announce our first Cornell K. Lisa Yang Center for Wildlife Health Postdoctoral Fellowship Awardee, Carmen R. Smith ’17, DVM ’21, DACVP, who joins us as our inaugural Free-Ranging Wildlife Pathology Fellow, focused on unraveling the causes and conditions responsible for unexplained wildlife mortality events around the world. Dr. Smith hit the ground running and is actually in the field right now with our Asia programs lead Dr. Martin Gilbert, helping to investigate greater Asian one-horned rhino mortalities in Nepal’s Chitwan National Park while providing training for local teams on wildlife mortality investigative and diagnostic techniques.
We’ll have more related news in the months ahead, as we bring on more of the world’s top wildlife health ‘up-and-comers’ as K. Lisa Yang Wildlife Health Fellows and new colleagues!
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