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July 27, 2006 | Science | Community
Woodland Park Zoo, UW to expand collaboration, cooperation
Joel Schwarz    joels@u.washington.edu   
Wendy Hochnadel    wendy.hochnadel@zoo.org   

Woodland Park Zoo and the University of Washington have renewed their agreement for scientific and educational cooperation to promote research, education and conservation.

The agreement is designed to expand and promote greater cooperation between the two institutions according to Lisa Dabek, the zoo's director of conservation, and Randall Kyes, head of the UW's Division of International Programs at the Washington National Primate Research Center and a research associate professor of psychology.

"Both institutions offer unique collaborative opportunities with regard to expertise, service and facilities," said Kyes, who conducts collaborative research and training in conservation biology in Indonesia, Nepal, China, Thailand and Bangladesh. "The impressive range of collaborative activities that have taken place between the UW and the zoo thus far is only a glimpse of the potential that lies ahead."

Dabek said, "The agreement is designed, among other things, to promote the zoo's interest in conservation biology and conservation biology programs at the university and abroad. For example, the zoo has been supporting the International Field Training Program in Conservation Biology headed by Kyes since 1999." In addition, it will help promote the flow of information between the two institutions and the exchanges of zoo employees and UW faculty and students for teaching, research and training purposes.

The two institutions have had a formal cooperative agreement since 2001, although UW students have been doing behavioral and observational studies on grizzly bears, western lowland gorillas, orangutans, Asian elephants, laughing thrushes and other animals since at least l975. One current zoo employee, Cheryl Frederick, is also a graduate student working on her doctoral degree with Kyes in the animal behavior program in the UW's psychology department. Frederick's research has focused on the reproductive biology of sun bears and the applications for conservation of this endangered species.

###

For more information, contact Kyes at (206) 543-3025 or rkyes@u.washington.edu . Contact the zoo's public relations department at (206) 684-4838 to talk to Dabek.



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