주제: “Wildlife Diseases, Emerging Diseases and One Health”
일시: 2013년 4월 16일(화) 오후 3:00
장소: 서울대학교 수의과대학 5층 소회의실
주최: One Health Forum Korea
주관: 서울대학교 수의과대학
일정:
오후 3:00-3:20 등록
3:20-3:25 환영사(류판동 서울대 수의대 학장)
3:25-3:40 One Health Forum Korea 2012 보고(천명선 서울대 수의대 연구교수)
3:40-4:40 [발표 1]
주제: “The Canadian Cooperative Wildlife Health Centre and Emerging Diseases”
연자: Ian Barker, Emeritus Professor of Pathology and Wildlife Diseases, Ontario Veterinary College (OVC), University of Guelph, Canada
4:40-5:00 휴식 Coffee Break
5:00-5:30 [발표 2]
주제: “Efficient Oral Rabies Vaccine Distribution for Wild Animal Originated Rabies Control”
연자: 신남식 교수, 서울대학교 수의과대학 야생동물의학교실
Nam-Shik SHIN, Professor of Zoo & Wildlife Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Seoul National University
5:30-6:00 토론
토론자: 학계 야생동물질병 전문가, 농림수산검역검사본부 관계자, 환경부 관계자, 국립환경과학원 관계자, 한국야생동물의학회 관계자, 야생동물구조센터 관계자 등
Curriculum Brevis - Ian K. Barker
Ian Barker is a University Emeritus Professor of pathology and wildlife diseases at the Ontario Veterinary College (OVC), University of Guelph; the former Director of the Ontario/Nunavut Region of the Canadian Cooperative Wildlife Health Centre (CCWHC); and collaborator in a graduate programme in Zoological Medicine jointly offered by OVC and the Toronto Zoo. He is an OVC graduate (1968) who obtained a PhD at the University of Melbourne, Australia (1974), where he was wildlife pathologist for two years. For over 35 years he taught DVM students at the OVC, did general veterinary and wildlife diagnostic work, and carried out research and mentored graduate education, mainly related to diseases of wildlife, including those transmissible from animals to people.
He and his collaborators first diagnosed spongiform encephalopathy in deer, and detected the bacterium that causes Lyme borreliosis, the West Nile virus, and White Nose Syndrome of bats, in Canada. The CCWHC maintains surveillance for problems potentially impacting on wildlife, domestic animals, and human beings, such as environmental contamination, avian botulism, Newcastle disease, West Nile virus and Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, many of which are ‘emerging diseases’, or are likely to be affected by climate change.
He is the coeditor of two books, one on the history of the Canadian Army Veterinary Corps and the other on Infectious Diseases of Wild Mammals, and is author/coauthor of 9 book chapters (including those on gastrointestinal pathology in the last three 3 editions of Jubb, Kennedy and Palmer, Pathology of Domestic Animals), over 130 refereed scientific publications on topics involving disease in vertebrates from fish to mammals, and numerous abstracts, conference and continuing education presentations.
He has chaired the advisory committees of over 25 graduate students, who can be found as zoo veterinarians; private, industrial or governmental veterinary pathologists and research workers; wildlife biologists; bureaucrats; and academics (several now retired!), in Canada, the United States, Australia, Europe and Africa, and he has been a graduate committee member for about 50 more.
He has served as an external examiner for veterinary courses and graduate degrees, and as an external referee for promotion and tenure, in Canadian, American, West Indian and Australian universities. Professional activity includes service: on Canadian federal and provincial technical committees and panels related to wildlife diseases and/or public health; on the executives of national and international scientific associations; on editorial boards (Assistant Editor, Pathology, for Journal of Wildlife Diseases for 18 years, and for International Journal for Parasitology for 3 years); on scientific conference organizing committees at the international, national and provincial level; as a referee for a number of granting agencies and scientific journals; as a member of expert panels reviewing the activities of Canadian and American scientific agencies or programmes related to wildlife diseases, zoological medicine and public health; and as an invited moderator or keynote speaker at continuing education workshops, scientific meetings and academic institutions in Canada and abroad.
He has received a number of awards recognizing his teaching and commitment to veterinary curriculum development (1985 - Norden Award for teaching, OVC; 2002 - University of Guelph Faculty Association Teaching Award, OVC; 2010 - the Harold W. Casey Award for lifetime contributions to the teaching of veterinary pathology, Charles Louis Davis Foundation for Veterinary Pathology); the Canadian Animal Health Laboratorian of the Year for his contributions to the development of veterinary laboratory medicine (2004 - Canadian Association of Animal Health Laboratorians); the Distinguished Service Award (1999 - Wildlife Disease Association) recognizing his contributions to the field of wildlife disease study, and the Tom Thorne and Beth Williams Memorial Award (2012 - Wildlife Disease Association) for achievements combining wildlife disease research and policy implementation.
His scientific credo, “If you don’t look, you don’t find” applies to all fields of investigation.