#avmaecon Taylor DeWitt #SAVMA Economic Officer Advocacy works! We need to save the Public Service Loan Repayment Program! (at Renaissance Chicago O'Hare Hotel) https://www.instagram.com/p/BpSDsJqhyzm/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=gmzk40p0gxbt

#dc comics#batman#dc#bruce wayne#batfam#dick grayson#batfamily#dc fanart#tim drake





seen from Netherlands
seen from France
seen from Israel

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from Chile

seen from Spain
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Syria
seen from United States
seen from Tunisia
seen from United States
seen from United States
#avmaecon Taylor DeWitt #SAVMA Economic Officer Advocacy works! We need to save the Public Service Loan Repayment Program! (at Renaissance Chicago O'Hare Hotel) https://www.instagram.com/p/BpSDsJqhyzm/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=gmzk40p0gxbt
Baştan Savma Cevap Yarışı
Baştan Savma Cevap Yarışı
Oyun Açıklaması:
View On WordPress
Baştan Savma Cevap Yarışı
Baştan Savma Cevap Yarışı
Oyun Açıklaması:
View On WordPress
When 4yearsofvetschool was featured at the 2016 SAVMA Symposium
My reaction:
A big “thank you” shout out to thezoovetlife for sending this to me from the SAVMA Symposium at Iowa State! I feel truly honored and amazed that this tumblr has such a wide viewership, and I am so glad you enjoy reading these posts. I hope everyone had an amazing time at the symposium this year! You guys rock! -4yearsofvetschool
oh and I'll ask again since its this week: Anyone else going to the SAVMA symposium at Colorado State?
I'm doing the small animal sports rehab wet lab! and the freshman anatomy trivia!
Another obligatory question mark?
OH! and raise your hand if you're going to the SAVMA Symposium in Colorado in March!
I'm in the small animal sports rehab wet lab. anyone else?
“Saving the Sea Turtles, One Fisherman at a Time"
Dr. Kimberly Stewart graduated from RUSVM not knowing that she would one day be back in St. Kitts making an incredible impact on the local community. She is known not only as Assistant Professor for Exotic Species, but also as the director of the St. Kitts Sea Turtle Monitoring Network, a nonprofit, community based organization she founded in 2003. But, trying to start a sea turtle conservation movement in a country whose fisherman still hunt the turtles for profit would prove to be more than challenging. After going alone to the Fisheries Co-op and getting to know the fisherman while taking measurements and data from their killed turtles, she slowly gained the trust of the fishermen. Dr. Stewart ventured on to show that her community outreach could change what was, once, a way of life and a culture of the island people.
In an effort to minimize the sea turtle harvest, non consumable sources of income are provided to communities. Stewart takes the equipment needed to make glass beads to fishermen and teach them the art of glass bead making. One of the reasons sea turtles are hunted here is so their shells can be used for making jewelry. Glass bottles that are collected during beach cleanups are recycled and used for this purpose instead. She also sets aside money from her grants in order to have paid positions within her organization. Theophilus Taylor, once the lead fisherman in sea turtle harvest in St. Kitts, would bring in 60 turtles per season. He is now a lead conservation technician and assists Stewart with radio tagging, monitoring, and even teaching at the sea turtle camps. When first given the opportunity to go back to his own primary school, he began his educational presentation with, “Did you know a sea turtle can carry a message around the world on its back?” Stewart remembers the moment and says, “…it brought tears to my eyes.”
Click the photo of recycled crayons to check out the SKSTMN's Facebook page.
In order to reach out to the younger community, she provides jugs for children to put their crayon stubs so that they can be recycled, melted into sea turtle shapes, and sold as new crayons to help fund the organization. She also organizes “Sea Turtle Camp” and provides enough funding for 100 students to attend. Known by the local children as the “turtle lady”, Stewart hand delivers applications in hard copy form and then picks them up a few weeks later, because “not every student may have a telephone, or computer, at home,” she says. At the camp, students are taught how the sea turtles are an important part of the ecosystem, and when they graduate from the camp they are invited on a leatherback nest excavation. Dr. Stewart has taken one of the sea turtle camp, and local high school, graduates under her wing. While he is enthusiastic about volunteering his time to the SKSTMN, he graduated school unable to read. She uses this as an opportunity to give back, by paying a tutor to teach him this invaluable ability, ultimately changing his life!
“It’s not only about the conservation of the sea turtles, but also about instilling a whole new direction in the lives of these (the local) people.” Dr. Stewart went on to tell me about how these turtles are an important part of ecotourism for this community, whose economy relies primarily on tourism. She explained, she is trying to help them understand that sea turtles can be a sustainable source of income for their economy. While Dr. Stewart often appears on the local radio shows, at high school science fairs, and in the community fishery complex, she is working hard to help people see the turtles in “a different light”. And her work is paying off. A local beach has recently been designated as a protected nesting area for the turtles, and more sea turtle hunters are being converted into sea turtle saviors, like Theophilus.
Juvenile hawksbill sea turtle in St. Kitts. Photo by Katharine Garrido 2012. All rights reserved. —
Looking into the future, Dr. Stewart hopes to have a more permanent legislation in place to protect the sea turtles. She would also like to see construction of an educational, rehabilitation, ecotourism facility, which would also house a gift shop for the glass jewelry made by the fishermen. This would be able to provide more jobs to the local citizens, encourage tourists to visit by providing a unique experience, and also house the conservational efforts and rehabilitation for the turtles. Permanent sustainability of the project is the long term goal. Meanwhile, Dr. Stewart will be saving sea turtles, an ecosystem, and a community, one fisherman at a time.
SAVMA! Yeah!
If you haven't already, add SAVMA to your Facebook subscriptions and follow our SAVMA President, Bridget Heilsberg's AVMA Executive Board meetings. She is looking for interactive feedback and will be frequently updating the page asking for your opinions on HOT topics in vet med!
"SAVMA President Bridget Heilsberg is getting ready to head to dinner with the AVMA Executive Board - what are some things you'd like her to bring up over the next three day meeting?"
Click the link above! Let your opinions be heard!