Zoological medicine

Zoological medicine refers to the specialty of veterinary medicine that addresses the care of captive zoo animals, free ranging wildlife species, aquatic animals, birds, reptiles and amphibians, and includes non-domestic companion animals (or exotic pets). Zoological medicine incorporates principles of ecology, wildlife conservation, and veterinary medicine, and applies them to wild animals in natural and artificial environments.[1] As a specialty of veterinary medicine in the United States, the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) has recognized the College of Zoological Medicine as the governing body of this specialty field since 1983. As such, zoological medicine is equivalent to other subspecialties of veterinary medicine (such as surgery, anesthesia, internal medicine, pathology, etc.), which are recognized and governed by their particular colleges.


The American College of Zoological Medicine (ACZM) is an international organization composed of 152 members (as of May 2014), which recognizes, establishes and regulates standards and criteria necessary for veterinarians to be true specialists in zoological medicine. The board certification in zoological medicine encompasses expertise in general captive zoo medicine, aquatic animal medicine, avian medicine, reptile and amphibian medicine, and free-ranging wildlife medicine. A specialist in zoological medicine recognized by the College of Zoological Medicine is called a diplomate. Board certified diplomates of the ACZM serve as clinical veterinarians, zoo managers, wildlife veterinarians, wildlife conservation agents, researchers, teachers, government officials, and other similar leadership roles. Current certifying examinations are available in general zoo, wildlife, aquatics and zoological companion animals.

Zoological Medicine Training Programs

The following Training Programs are approved by the American College of Zoological Medicine:[2]

gollark: Actually, that sentence has a Flesch Reading Ease Score of 71.1.
gollark: Also, this doesn't actually make AMD cards bad or Nvidia cards good for... the majority of people.
gollark: Big companies are weirdly insensitive to cost a lot of the time, but not enough that they'll just buy *anything*.
gollark: If they're buying a giant amount of cards they won't also want to buy insanely expensive ones.
gollark: No, they'll probably still care about money.

References

  1. Home - American Association of Zoo Veterinarians. (n.d.). Retrieved December 14, 2014, from http://aazv.org/
  2. "Home - American College of Zoological Medicine." Home - American College of Zoological Medicine. Web. 14 Dec. 2014. <http://aczm.org/>.
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