Brent R. Whitaker, DVM, MS
A preceptorship in aquatic animal medicine should serve to educate the
student by providing exposure to the issues and practice of aquatic and environmental medicine.
This must be accomplished in a manner that stimulates intellectual challenge, resulting in a
positive experience for both the student and the supporting institution.
Educational programs, such as Aqua-vet, Aqua-med, and Envirovet, are
becoming more available to veterinary students interested in aquatic animal medicine. Students
participating in preceptorship programs will all have different levels of ability as well as
specific interests. A program must therefore be flexible enough to take advantage of students
strengths while simultaneously creating an educational opportunity that is challenging and
rewarding.
Providing focus for the student is of paramount importance. An orientation
manual is an effective way to do this. In it the objectives of the preceptorship, as well as
your expectations should be clearly stated. At the National Aquarium in Baltimore for instance,
we require that a student complete a case report in the "What is your diagnosis"
format, and a project that is presented to aquarium staff. Projects have covered a wide variety
of topics (table 1) and are designed to contribute significantly to our understanding of
specific problems. The student, the animal health staff, the husbandry staff, and the facility
all benefit from these investigations.
Students often bring to a program enthusiasm, and a relentless thirst for
knowledge. Exposure to aquatic animal medicine may include, but is not limited to: suggested
readings, assigned cases that illustrate disease processes, discussion of preventative medicine
and quarantine programs, diagnostic procedures and laboratory techniques, pathological
examinations, water quality systems and analysis, current research, politics at an institutional
and industry level, and interaction with knowledgeable husbandry personnel.
Additional experience in aquatic animal medicine may be provided by
utilizing neighboring facilities as educational resources. For instance, our students spend time
during their rotation at the University of Maryland's Aquatic Toxicology and Pathology
Laboratory, Johns Hopkins Division of Comparative Medicine, and The National Zoo. These
excursions also give the student an opportunity to explore alternative career opportunities.
The need for trained aquatic animal veterinarians will continue to grow.
Many veterinary schools are now incorporating basic courses into their curriculum that serve to
expose students to this evolving field of veterinary medicine. Providing students with the
opportunity to observe first-hand the challenges of aquatic animal medicine may allow them to
decide if this is a career that they will continue to pursue. Indeed, veterinary internship and
resident programs in aquatic animal medicine are now available. Through these programs we
prepare our colleagues of tomorrow and in doing so, create a future in aquatic animal medicine
and associations such as ours.
Table I. Examples of Preceptorship Projects
1. Carr W., 1992. The safety of using nolvasan (Chlorhexidine
diacetate) in the freshwater aquatic plant, Water Spirte (X).
2. Carr W., 1992. Exophthalmos in highhat (Cubbyu sp.).
3. Coniglario J.A., 1992. Hand rearing oophagous tadpoles of the
strawberry poison arrow frog (Dendrobates pumilio) : A review of natural history,
husbandry and diet at the National Aquarium in Baltimore.
4. Bebak J., 1992. Some suggestions for the control and antemortem
diagnosis of hemochromatosis in the rainforest birds.
5. Bernstein J.W., 1992. Enlarged thyroids in teleosts at the
National Aquarium in Baltimore.
6. DeRolf S., 1990. A study of silver-beaked tanager chicks in the
rainforest at the National Aquarium in Baltimore.
7. Gillus J., 1993. Gross and histologic features of the
gastrointestinal tract of the harvestfish, Peprilus alepridotus, with implications for
artificial rearing.
8. Griffin T., 1993. Nutrition in Golden Lion Tamarins.
9. Leff A.A., 1991. A preliminary study of the effects of
antimicrobials on nitrification in a marine aquarium system.
10. King R.K., 1991. The natural history and survey of husbandry
practices in Corytophanes cristatus ( Crested Forest Lizard).
11. Orcutt C., 1990. Disease due to Mycobacterium avium: with emphasis
on clinical presentation and risk factors in humans as well as disease transmission and its
prevention among animals and people.
12. Ryer M.C., 1993. Ocular disease in anurians: A review of the
literature.
13. Siebert M.L., 1992. The management and theory behind lateral line
erosive syndrome: A comparative study. Spangenberg J., 1992. A preliminary assessment of health
status in the atlantic coral reef system: Historical background, current status, and possible
avenues for future investigation.
14. Yanong R. , 1992. Cataracts: Possible causes and suggestions for
environmental and nutritional therapy.
15. Yanong R. 1992. Stress in Elasmobranchs: The assessment of serum
chemistries as a monitoring tool during the capture and transport of the sandbar shark,
Carcharhinus plumbeus.