Third MOAAR Symposium Draws Record Crowd

MOAAR exotic pet

With a focus on the skillsets needed to treat aquatic, amphibian, and reptilian patients, the 3rd biennial Medicine of Aquatics, Amphibians, and Reptiles (MOAAR) Symposium this fall was a stunning success, attracting an audience of over 230. The Purdue Veterinary Medicine Exotic Animal Medicine Club hosted the event virtually Saturday and Sunday, November 20 and 21, through the Whova platform that inspired networking among attendees.  Because it was virtual, this year’s attendance spanned 37 states and Puerto Rico, and 15 countries.  Joining those participants were many Purdue veterinary students who took advantage of the opportunity to learn more about exotic animal medicine.

The keynote speaker, Dr. Chelsea Anderson, associate veterinarian at the Georgia Aquarium, opened the symposium Saturday morning with an engaging lecture about her experience with beluga whale reproduction. Additional speakers included:

  • Dr. Michael Adkesson, vice president of clinical medicine for the Chicago Zoological Society
  • Dr. Christa Barrett, clinical instructor for Marine Animal Clinical Services at Mississippi State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine
  • Dr. Michelle Bowman (PU DVM ’97), associate veterinarian at the Indianapolis Zoo
  • Nick Burgmeier, research biologist and extension wildlife specialist in the Purdue University Department of Forestry and Natural Resources
  • Dr. Lorraine  Corriveau (PU DVM ’99), primary care clinician in the Purdue University Veterinary Hospital Small Animal Primary Care Service
  • Dr. Kathryn Gamble, director of veterinary services at the Lincoln Park Zoo
  • Dr. Barolomeo Gorgolione, assistant professor in the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife at Michigan State University
  • Dr. Nicholas Jew, avian and exotics veterinarian
  • Dr. Angela Lennox (PU DVM ‘89), exotic animal medicine veterinarian and owner of the Avian and Exotic Animal Clinic in Indianapolis
  • Dr. Robert Ossiboff, clinical assistant professor in the Department of Comparative, Diagnostic, and Population Medicine at the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine
  • Dr. Frank Paladino, Jack W. Schrey Distinguished Professor of Biology at Purdue University Fort Wayne
  • Edi Sonntag, adjunct faculty / lecturer in biology at the University of Michigan-Dearborn
  • Dr. Andy Stamper (PU DVM ‘93), conservation science manager for Disney Conservation
  • Dr. Jennifer Strasser, aquaculture specialist with the Indiana Board of Animal Health
  • Dr. Steve Thompson, clinical associate professor of small animal primary care in the PVM Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences and clinician in the Veterinary Hospital’s Small Animal Primary Care Service
  • Dr. Kelsey Trumpp (PU DVM 2019), who completed a zoological medicine internship at the University of Illinois Veterinary Teaching Hospital and is currently completing a four-year residency program in zoological medicine at the University of Georgia
screenshot of Dr. Anderson delivering her lecture virtually
Dr. Chelsea Anderson presents the 3rd biennial MOAAR Symposium Keynote Lecture entitled, “Beluga Whale Reproduction”.

Symposium attendees had the ability to select from a wide-variety of lecture topics in two concurrent tracks: one on amphibians/reptiles and the other on aquatic animals. Lecture topics included celomic surgical considerations, elasmobranch medicine, snakes, fish heterogenous infections, hellbender recovery, amphibian disease, herps, walruses, and ectothermic pharming.

For participants who were not able to attend in real-time or who are interested in reviewing sessions, recordings of the sessions are available online. Additionally, registration is still open to those who had not signed-up for the symposium, but would like access to the recorded sessions. Click here to register and gain access to the recordings.

Writer(s): Susan Xioufaridou and Madeline Brod, PVM Communications Intern | pvmnews@purdue.edu

Recent Stories

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

This week, we are proud to recognize Lorraine Fox, who is a business assistant with the Veterinary Medicine Procurement Center.

PVM Interview Days Move College Closer to Admitting the DVM Class of 2030

After a total of three afternoons dedicated to conducting in-person interviews with 226 prospective veterinary students, the Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine is close to completing the process of admitting 84 members of the incoming first-year DVM class – the Class of 2030.  The students invited for the interview days were selected from a total pool of 1,930 applicants from across the country as well as countries abroad.

Experts to Gather at Purdue for Conference Addressing the Public Health Threat of Antimicrobial Resistance

The ongoing challenges posed by multi-drug resistant infections will be the focus of a multidisciplinary conference taking place in three weeks at Purdue University.  The Fourth Annual Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance is set for February 25–26, 2026 at Purdue’s Stewart Center in West Lafayette. Registration is still open for the event, which will bring together scientists and scholars from human and veterinary medicine, public health, research, and industry to address the determinants, dynamics and deterrence of drug resistance.

PVM’s Upcoming Coppoc One Health Lecture to Focus on Dogs as Sentinels of Environmental Exposure

The Purdue University College of Veterinary Medicine brings a leading One Health scholar to campus each year to address vital health issues from a One Health perspective as part of the Coppoc One Health Lecture series.  This year’s presentation, scheduled for February 26 in Lynn Hall Room 2026, is on the engaging topic, “One Health at Home: Dogs as Sentinels of Environmental Exposure.” The speaker will be Audrey Ruple, DVM, MS, PhD, DACVPM, MRCVS, the Dorothy A. and Richard G. Metcalf Professor of Veterinary Medical Informatics at the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech.

“Paws Up” – brought to you by the PVM Wellness Committee

Today we are happy to acknowledge our Student Success Center Team.

One Health: A ‘digital twin’ model for predicting cancer outcomes

The striking similarities between invasive bladder cancer in dogs and humans have fueled research advances for more than three decades. Most of that work has looked at separate aspects of the disease — risk factors, early detection, symptoms, treatment and gene expression. But a new project at Purdue University that combines many types of available data in a “digital twin” model of bladder cancer may prove powerful enough to predict patient outcomes, starting with the probability of metastasis.

Purdue Professor Emeritus Bill Blevins Wins Lifetime Achievement Award at ACVR Annual Meeting

The American College of Veterinary Radiology (ACVR) gave its esteemed Lifetime Achievement Award for 2024 to Purdue Professor Emeritus Bill Blevins, who is well known to countless Purdue Veterinary Medicine alumni for the expertise he taught them about all things Diagnostic Imaging during his long Purdue career.