Home arrow News Archives arrow General News arrow Lecture: Mongolia's role in understanding avian flu.

Login

Search Mongolia

Syndicate

Latest comments

Mongolian President ...
now that is interesting...Mongolia Web should do a full stor...
More...
By INTJay

Mongolian President ...
Bottled water costs 200 times more energy to get it to the c...
More...
By froit

Mongolian President ...
Bottled water costs 200 times more energy to get it to the c...
More...
By froit

Now Online...

No Users Online
Lecture: Mongolia's role in understanding avian flu. PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 24 April 2006
Disease at the interface of human,  livestock and wildlife life:
Mongolia's role in a global effort to understand the spread and threat of avian influenza
 
Speaker: Amanda Fine, PhD
Director, Wildlife Conservation Society
 
April 27, 2006, 5:00 pm
National University of Mongolia, Building no. 1,
Round Lecture Hall (second floor)
(The lecture will be in English)
 
Amanda Fine, Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society in Ulaanbaatar, will describe how "interface" diseases, those that affects human, wildlife and livestock populations, require coordinated responses from the veterinary, wildlife and human health sectors. She will explain how the traditionally separate fields of wildlife biology, veterinary medicine and public health are coming together to understand and prevent the spread of avian influenza in Mongolia and around the world.

American Center for Mongolian Studies
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
http://www.mongoliacenter.org

  Be first to comment this article
RSS comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.3.0

 
< Prev   Next >
web news,

Mongolia Websites

During the Stalinist purges of the 1930's almost every monastery in Mongolia was destroyed. In 1979 an atlas was published in Ulaanbaatar by Mr. Rinchen with an overview of more than 900 religious sites that used to exist in Mongolia. However a lot the information listed seems to be not accurate. A research has been initiated to get a better idea of all the buddhist buildings that once stood in Mongolia.