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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.
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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
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?
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
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
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
Goals • Receive feedback from 75% of survey recipients • Recommend easily implementable enrichment for small zoos • Publish findings in a zoological journal
Challenges • Collaboration with the zoo • Obtaining funding for fecal analysis
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
Committees • Literature Review • Nikko, Andrea, Emmarie • Grants • Caitlin, Gretchen, Josh • Editing • Amy, Emmarie, Kelly • Survey • Josh, Logan, Kelly, Nikko
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
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