Wild animal lives through a welfare lens

Our in-person and online Seminar Series on Wild Animal Lives Through a Welfare Lens is delivered in partnership with the Royal Veterinary College and the Institute of Zoology (Zoological Society of London) as part of the MSc Wild Animal Biology.

Seminar 1
Seminar 1  |  October 23, 2024

Introduction

This introductory seminar features Dr. Ross Macleod from Liverpool John Moores University, who discusses Developing New Approaches to Measure the Welfare of Wild Animal Populations, with a focus on the use of thermal imaging.

Dr. María Díez-León from the Royal Veterinary College introduces Animal Welfare Science in the Wild, and Dr. Vittoria Elliott from Wild Animal Initiative and the Smithsonian Institution speaks on The Field of Wild Animal Welfare Science: Integrating Welfare, Stress, Behavioral Ecology, Motivations, Personalities, Fitness, and Adaptation.

A panel discussion follows with Dr. Ross Macleod, Dr. Vittoria Elliott, and additional panelists Dr. Janire Castellano Bueno and Prof. Trenton Garner.

All sessions of this seminar series are hybrid events. You can attend online via Zoom or in-person.

Date

October 23, 2024

Time

3-5 pm

In-person location:

Great Hall, Royal Veterinary College
Royal College Street
London
NW1 0TU
United Kingdom

The Great Hall is directly in front of the entrance. Please ask at reception if you need assistance.

Venue map

Speakers and panelists

Ross Macleod

Ross Macleod

Speaker

Developing New Approaches to Measure the Welfare of Wild Animal Populations

  • Ross researches predictive ecology, focusing on how behavior and physiology forecast ecosystem changes and assessing wild animal welfare through non-invasive methods. His work includes urban bird ecology and tropical conservation. In addition, he is currently working on developing non-invasive methods to assess welfare in wild species.


Maria Diez-Leon

María Díez-León

Organizer & speaker

Animal Welfare Science in the Wild

  • María is a zoologist focused on animal behaviour and welfare, with degrees in Biology (University of Navarra), Applied Animal Behaviour and Welfare (University of Edinburgh), and a PhD from the University of Guelph. Her research, supervised by Professor Georgia Mason, explored how housing affects carnivore behaviour and welfare, relevant to conservation breeding. Now faculty at RVC, she investigates animal welfare indicators and the impact of captivity on conservation.


Vittoria Elliott

Organizer & speaker

The Field of Wild Animal Welfare Science: Integrating Welfare, Stress, Behavioral Ecology, Motivations, Personalities, Fitness, and Adaptation.

  • Vittoria Elliott is a Research Associate at the Smithsonian Institution. She studies a range of disciplines and taxonomies, from ecosystem modeling to behavioral ecology, population genetics, and environmental DNA. Most recently, she has been conducting research to understand wild animal welfare and implications for wildlife. Vittoria was previously Science Director at Wild Animal Initiative and Conservation International, and a consultant for WorldFish and FAO. She completed her PhD in ecology and evolution at Durham University.


Janire Castellano Bueno

Organizer & panelist

  • Janire Castellano Bueno is Wild Animal Initiative’s Outreach Manager. She completed her PhD in Animal Welfare and Affective Neuroscience at Newcastle University. During her doctoral research, she focused on the assessment of long-term welfare of laboratory macaques using a multidisciplinary approach. She has extensive experience in primate welfare and behavior as well as in statistical modeling. Janire is located in Newcastle (UK).

    Janire is a member of Wild Animal Initiative’s Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion committee.

    janire.castellanobueno@wildanimalinitiative.org


Trent Garner

Trenton W. J. Garner

Panelist

  • Trent Garner is a Professor at the Institute of Zoology. His current work examines how parasites are maintained and incur costs in amphibian hosts, and how this may affect host or parasite population dynamics and persistence. Trent’s research group uses fieldwork, experiments, epidemiological modeling, and other approaches to understand the conditions under which chytridiomycete fungi and ranaviruses threaten amphibian biodiversity. Trent earned his PhD in Zoology from the University of Zurich.

Additional information

Event Accessibility and Inclusivity Guide

Code of Conduct

Contact

Janire Castellano Bueno, event coordinator
janire.castellanobueno@wildanimalinitiative.org

Maria Diez-Leon
mdiezleon@rvc.ac.uk