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Brookfield Zoo Staff
Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine Staff Biographies
University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine
Brookfield Zoo Staff
George B. Rabb, Ph.D., Director
Dr. Rabb has
served as Brookfield Zoo Director and President of the Chicago
Zoological Society since 1976.
He directs the zoo’s local, national, and international
efforts, all designed to enhance appreciation and maintenance of the
earth’s biological heritage through conservation, education, and
research. He received
his bachelor’s degree in biology from the College of Charleston,
Charleston, S.C., and his master’s degree and doctorate from the
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Dr. Rabb joined the zoo in 1956 as curator of research.
Deeply concerned with public education, he created the
zoo’s education department and has been instrumental in expanding
the use of naturalistic exhibitry pioneered by Brookfield Zoo’s
founders. He has
affiliations with conservation organizations worldwide, and served
seven years until 1996 as Chairman of the Species Survival
Commission (SSC) of the World Conservation Union (IUCN).
Dr. Rabb continues to work with SSC/IUCN in communications,
sustainable use, and the Declining Amphibian Populations Task Force.
Dr. Rabb is a Co-Director of the Conservation Medicine Center
of Chicago.
Thomas Meehan, D.V.M., Chief
Veterinarian
Dr. Meehan came from Lincoln Park Zoo to head the zoo’s
Department of Animal Health in July 1993.
He is responsible for a program of preventive medicine and
clinical care for the zoo’s collection of 2,883 individual
amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals, fish, and invertebrates
representing 456 species in 26 major animal exhibits.
He oversees the hospital staff, which includes two full-time
associate veterinarians and several laboratory and veterinary
technicians. His research interests include Vitamin D in primates,
Diseases of Gorillas and emerging infectious disease. Dr. Meehan
serves as veterinary advisor to the Gorilla and Spectacled Bear
Species Survival Plans (SSPs). He serves on the Infectious Disease
Committee of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians and the
Animal Health Committee and the Nutrition Advisory Group of the
American Zoo and Aquarium Association.
He is chair of the Research Committee of the Conservation
Medicine Center of Chicago, a collaborative initiative of Brookfield
Zoo, Loyola University’s Stritch School of Medicine, and the
University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine.
He received his B.S. in agriculture and his D.V.M. from
University of Missouri. Dr.
Meehan is a member of the Steering Committee and Chair of the Research
Subcommittee of the Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
John Cadle, Ph.D., Curator of Reptiles and Amphibians
Dr.
Cadle came to Brookfield Zoo in 1999, after having spent six years as
Associate Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and
Associate Curator in Herpetology at the Museum of Comparative Zoology
at Harvard University. He
received his undergraduate degree in zoology from the University of
Georgia and his doctorate in zoology from the University of California
at Berkeley. Dr.
Cadle’s research interests: Tropical
biodiversity, especially of amphibians and reptiles in South America
and Madagascar; Evolution, systematics and biogeography of amphibians
and reptiles; Phylogeny of snakes using inferences from morphological
and molecular data; Field conservation biologyincluding the impact of
diseases on natural populations.
He has had extensive field experience in Central and South
America, Africa, Madagascar and has current projects in Madagascar and
South America. Dr. Cadle
is a member of the Research Subcommittee of the Conservation Medicine
Center of Chicago.
Jean Dubach, Ph.D., Conservation
Biologist in charge of the Molecular Genetics Program.
Dr.
Dubach joined Brookfield Zoo in 1989 and oversees the operation of the
genetics laboratory that conducts genetic service work for zoos
throughout North America and research projects on captive and wild
populations from Australia, Africa, and South America.
The laboratory supports a wide range of genetic technologies
from chromosome analysis to DNA fingerprinting, sequencing and
genotyping. Dr. Dubach
received an undergraduate degree from the University of Colorado in
nursing; holds two masters degrees, from the University of Colorado in
population biology and from Northern Colorado University in applied
statistics; and received a doctorate in population genetics/
biochemistry from New Mexico State University.
Dr. Dubach is a member of the Research Subcommittee of the
Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
Patricia McGill, Ph.D., Chair, Animal Collection and Curator of Birds
Dr. McGill is Brookfield Zoo’s Chairperson for the
Animal Collection Division and Curator of Birds. She is professionally
trained in ornithology with specific research background in seabird
breeding biology. She is
experienced in research design, field studies, and data analysis as
well as in the management of captive bird populations.
Dr. McGill is also the Humboldt Penguin Species Survival Plan (SSP)
Coordinator and works with the penguin management representatives of
other institutions to develop the demographic, genetic, social, and
husbandry management of Humboldt penguins in captivity. Other primary
areas of current study include the effects of UV light on pair-bonds
and mate choice in tropical forest birds; behavioral and stress
endocrinology of Micronesian kingfishers; captive management and
breeding of Hawaiian forest birds; and field conservation of Humboldt
penguins in South America. Patty
received her B.A. in Biology from Colorado College and both her
Master’s in wildlife science and her Ph.D. in vertebrate biology
from Cornell University. Dr.
McGill is a member of the Steering Committee and a member of the
Education Subcommittee of the Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
Tim Sullivan, M.E.S., Deputy Director and Chair, Department of
Conservation Biology
Mr. Sullivan is
Deputy Director of the zoo for conservation programs, which include
animal management science, field conservation and education programs. He came to the zoo in 1990 working with international
conservation programs. As
Chair of the Department of Conservation Biology he is responsible for
management of the conservation and research programs of the
department. Mr. Sullivan’s professional interest is in conservation
policy and planning. He
has worked extensively with international treaties relating to
wildlife conservation and on species conservation strategies.
He is actively involved with biodiversity recovery programs in
the Chicago region. Mr.
Sullivan has an undergraduate degree in biology from Cornell
University and a master’s degree in conservation biology from Yale
University. Mr. Sullivan
is a member of the Steering Committee of the Conservation Medicine
Center of Chicago.
Loyola
University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine Staff Biographies
Stephen Slogoff, M.D., Dean, Stritch
School of Medicine and Senior Vice President for Clinical Affairs,
Loyola University Health System
Dr.
Slogoff joined Loyola as Professor and Chairman of the Department of
Anesthesiology in 1993. In
1999 he became Senior Vice President for Clinical Affairs, Loyola
University Health System. He
was appointed Dean of Stritch School of Medicine in 2000.
Dr. Slogoff received his M.D. from Jefferson Medical College in
Philadelphia and completed his residency at that hospital.
Prior to arriving at Loyola, he held such positions as Chief of Anesthesia, U.S. Army Institute of
Surgical Research; Clinical Professor of Anesthesiology, UTMB &
UTHSC, Houston; Assistant Professor, Anesthesiology, Baylor College of
Medicine; Vice Chairman of Anesthesiology, Texas Heart Institute.
Dr. Slogoff is a member of Loyola Boards and he is Chairman of
the Joint Physician/University Professional Liability Program
Management Committee, the Executive Faculty Committee of Stritch
School of Medicine, The Medical Council of Stritch School of Medicine.
Dr. Slogoff is a Co-Director of the Conservation Medicine
Center of Chicago
Kenneth McClatchey, D.D.S., M.D., Chairman and Helen M. and Raymond
M. Galvin Professor, Department of Pathology
Dr. McClatchey has been Chairman of the Department of
Pathology since 1996. He
is Director, Loyola Medical Laboratories.
He is an internationally known expert in head and neck
pathology as well as laboratory management and standardization, and
his textbook entitled Clinical Laboratory Medicine is widely considered a standard to be
used by practitioners as well as residents and fellows in training.
Dr. McClatchey is also the editor of the Archives
of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine as well as a member of the
JAMA editorial board. He
is Chair of the Steering Committee of the Conservation Medicine Center
of Chicago.
Lee M. Cera, D.V.M., Ph.D., Assistant Dean, Comparative Studies:
Director, Section of Comparative Medicine; and Associate Professor,
Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy
Dr.
Cera received her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from the University of
Illinois, Urbana and completed a residency in Comparative Medicine and
Pathology at the University of Chicago, Billings Hospital, Carlson
Animal Research Facility, Chicago, Illinois.
Her Ph.D. in Cell and Molecular Pathology was received from the
University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago.
She completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Molecular Biology/Biochem
at the University of Chicago, Cancer Research Center, Department of
Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology. Presently, Dr. Cera is the Assistant Dean for Comparative
Studies, Director, Animal Research Facility, Adjunct Assistant
Professor, Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy and
Department of Pathology at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of
medicine. Research
interests include animal models of human diseases; emerging zoonotic
diseases and their effect on endangered species; animal models and
infectious diseases. Dr. Cera is a member of the Steering Committee and chair of
the Education Committee of the Conservation medicine Center of
Chicago.
John Clancy, Jr., Ph.D., Professor and Chair, Department of Cell
Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy
Dr. Clancy has been a
Professor and Chair of Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy since
1986. His laboratory
studies the mechanism(s) of cell and whole organ transplantation
rejection and transplantation tolerance.
He has also studied extensively the role of heat shock proteins
in immunity and the influence of serotonin on the immune response.
Dr. Clancy is a member of the Steering Committee of the
Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
Sidney Houff, M.D., Ph.D., Professor and
chairman, Department of Neurology and Director, Neuroscience and Aging
Institute.
Dr.
Houff holds a Ph.D. in molecular virology from George Washington
University and an M.D. from the Medical College of Virginia.
He spent 15 years in the Infectious Diseases Branch, NINDS, NIH
and ten years at the Washington VAMC and Georgetown University prior
to coming to Loyola University Medical Center in June, 2000.
Dr. Houff’s research interest is in infections of the nervous
system, including rabies virus and JC virus.
While at NIH, Dr. Houff conducted research in the effects of
adult and fetal viral infections of the nervous system in non-human
primates. Dr. Houff is a
member of the Research Committee of the Conservation Medicine Center
of Chicago.
John Lednicky, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Pathology
Dr. Lednicky joined the Department of Pathology as an
Assistant Professor in January 2001; he was previously associated with
the Department of Molecular Virology and Microbiology at the Baylor
College of Medicine. After he graduated from college with a B.S.
degree in Microbiology, he worked as a clinical microbiology
technologist, where he specialized in the identification of unusual
microorganisms. He received his Ph.D. in Microbiology from the
University of Texas in Austin and finished his doctoral research in
the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Missouri-Columbia.
His research interests include mechanisms of transcription
control, DNA replication, and viral tumorigenesis pathways among
polyomaviruses, in the identification and control of emerging viruses,
and in the design of molecular tests for the detection and
identification of microorganisms.
Dr. Lednicky is also associated with the clinical microbiology
laboratory at Loyola, is involved in a research project for the
National Space Biomedical Research Institute, and is a member of both
the Steering and Research Committees of the Conservation Medicine
Center of Chicago
John M. Lee, M.D., Ph. D., Associate
Professor, Departments of Pathology and Pharmacology, and Associate
Dean for Educational Affairs
Dr. Lee joined Loyola in 1997 as an
Associate Professor, Departments of Pathology and Pharmacology &
Experimental Therapeutics. After
earning both his Ph.D. and M.D. from the University of Illinois at
Chicago he did his residency in Pathology at Massachusetts General
Hospital, Boston. Dr.
Lee’s research interests include animal models of Alzheimer’s
disease and
clinopathological correlations of neurodegenerative diseases.
Dr. Lee is a member of the Education Subcommittee of the
Conservation Medicine
Center of Chicago.
John A. Robinson, M.D., Associate Dean of Research
Dr.
Robinson joined Loyola in 1974 as Chief, Division of Rheumatology and
Immunology. In addition
to being Associate Dean of Research, he is also the Medical Director,
Therapeutic Apheresis. Dr.
Robinson earned his M.D. from the University of Illinois and did his
internship at Cook County Hospital.
His rheumatology-apheresis laboratory has two major goals:
(1) to develop new methods to modulate or blunt rejection
episodes and to inhibit T-cell cytotoxicity in auto-immune disease,
and (2) to identify new methods to induce permanent tolerance to
allografts, especially by using either photoimmunomodulation or
antibody depletion. Dr.
Robinson is a member of the Steering Committee of the Conservation
Medicine Center of Chicago.
University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine
Dr. Herbert Whiteley, Dean,
University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine
Dr.
Whiteley became dean of the University of Illinois College of
Veterinary Medicine in August 2001. Trained in comparative pathology,
he is a strong
proponent of veterinary medicine as embracing the spectrum of
biomedical science, studying life forms from bacteria and toxins to
all animal species and sciences from complex molecular biology and
epidemiology to applied medicine and public health. His background
includes a veterinary degree from Purdue University, a PhD from
Colorado State University, and diplomate status from the American
College of Veterinary Pathologists. During his recent tenure as head
of the Department of Pathobiology at the University of Connecticut, he
was involved with the diagnostic pathology, toxicologic pathology and
regional surveillance for West Nile disease.
Dr. Whiteley is a Co-director of the Conservation Medicine
Center of Chicago.
John J. Andrews, D.V.M., Ph.D., Professor of Pathology and Director,
Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory
Dr.
Andrews received his D.V.M. from Iowa State University and both his
M.S. and Ph.D. from Michigan State University.
He is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary
Pathologists. His
research interest in pathogenesis of respiratory diseases with a
particular emphasis on the development of diagnostic techniques for
the detection of agents in respirator tissues.
Dr. Andrews is a member of the Steering Committee of the
Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
Wanda M. Haschek-Hock, BVSc, Ph.D.,
Professor of Toxicologic Pathology, Department of Pathobiology,
College of Veterinary Medicine
Dr. Haschek-Hock received a B.V.Sc. (Honors) from the University of Sydney
in 1972 and a Ph.D. in Veterinary Pathology from Cornell University in
1977. She became a
Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Pathologists (ACVP) in
1977 and a Diplomate of the American Board of Toxicology in
1980. She has over 100 scientific publications in the fields of
toxicology and pathology, with emphasis on pulmonary toxicology and
mycotoxicoses, and is the senior editor of two textbooks on
toxicologic pathology. She is currently President of the Society of Toxicology’s
Comparative and Veterinary Specialty Section and a Councillor for the
ACVP. She has served as a
member of the FDA Veterinary Medicine Advisory Committee, Councillor
for the Society of Toxicologic Pathologists, Associate Editor for
Toxicological Sciences and on the Editorial Boards of
Toxicologic Pathology and Veterinary
Pathology. Her interests
in research and higher education center on toxicologic and diagnostic
pathology.
Dr. Haschek-Hock is a member of the Steering Committee of the
Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
Gary L. Jackson, Ph.D. M.A., Ph.D., Professor, Veterinary Biosciences and Veterinary
Research
Dr.
Jackson received his M.A. from the University of Missouri at Columbia
and his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois.
Research in his laboratory deals with two aspects of
neuroendocrine control of gonadotropin and prolactin secretion.
A primary area of study is the relationship between gonadal
steroids, neurotransmitters, and secretion of hypothalamic and
pituitary hormones in response to environmental and physiological
stimuli. The techniques
of in situ hybridization, microdialysis, push-pull perfusion,
and portal vessel cannulation are used to study temporal changes in
secretion of hypothalamic compounds and pituitary hormones in animals
subjected to endocrine and environmental manipulations.
Another major goal is to understand the relative roles of
putative endogenous circannual oscillators, photorefractoriness, and
photoinduction in regulating annual cycles of reproduction and
prolactin secretion. Dr.
Jackson is a member of the Research Subcommittee of the Conservation
Medicine Center of Chicago.
Uriel Kitron, M.P.H., Ph.D., Professor of Epidemiology and Professor,
Department of Pathology
Dr. Kitron received his M.P.H. from the University of
Michigan and his doctorate from the University of California at Santa
Barbara. His research and
teaching interests center around the epidemiology and ecology of
infectious diseases, particularly those carried by mosquitoes and
ticks (vector-borne), and the zoonoses (diseases that are common to
humans and other animals). He
applies tools such as geographic information systems and remote
sensing to gather and manage environmental data that can explain the
spatial distribution of disease and vectors, and assess risk of
transmission. Following
quantitative spatial analysis, maps can then be produced to target
further research efforts, as well as in support of surveillance and
control efforts by public health agencies.
Dr. Kitron is a member of the Research Subcommittee of the
Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
Tony Lawrence Goldberg, Ph.D., D.V.M., M.S., Assistant Professor of
Epidemiology, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology
Dr.
Goldberg earned his Ph.D. in Biological Anthropology from Harvard
University. He became a
Post-doctoral Graduate Research Assistant in the Department of
Veterinary Pathobiology at the University of Illinois where he earned
his Master of Science in Epidemiology and his D.V.M.
Dr. Goldberg’s current research interests include molecular
epidemiology and evolution; molecular investigation of viral
pathogens, including application of molecular genetic techniques to
the investigation of patterns of transmission and risk factors for
infection; molecular epidemiology and evolution of porcine
reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus, pseudorabies virus and
primate immunodeficiency viruses; quantitative epidemiology and
statistics; primate evolutionary genetics; molecular evolution,
population genetics; systematics; behavioral ecology of African
primates, with an emphasis on chimpanzees; development of laboratory
and analytical techniques for the genetic testing of hypotheses about
old world primate evolution. Dr.
Goldberg is a member of the Research and Education Subcommittees of
the Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago.
Gerald James Pijanowski, D.V.M., Ph.D.,
Associate Dean, Academic & Student Affairs and Associate
Professor, Department of Veterinary Biosciences
Dr. Pijanowski received his
D.V.M. from Cornell University and his master’s and doctorate from
Purdue University. His
research focus is anatomy: biomechanics
of themusculoskeletal system, interaction between the mechanical
environment of the musculoskeletal system and the biological
structure. Current
research: analysis and modeling of external skeletal fixator frames.
Dr. Pijanowski is a member of the Education Subcommittee of the
Conservation Medicine Center of Chicago
Victor E. Valli, D.V.M., Ph.D.
Dr.
Valli received his D.V.M. from the University of Toronto and both
his M.Sc. and Ph.D. from the University of Guelph.
He is a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary
Pathologists. His
primary research interest is hematopathology with emphasis on
leukemias and lymphomas and environmental toxicology.
Dr. Valli served as Co-director of the Conservation Medicine
Center of Chicago while Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine
and currently is a member of the Steering Committee.
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