PERSON: Andrew Cunningham
Employer
Zoological Society of London
Position
Deputy Director of Science and Professor of Wildlife Epidemiology
Biography
Andrew Cunningham is Deputy Director of Science at the Zoological Society of London, where he has worked since 1988, initially as veterinary pathologist and, most recently, as Professor of Wildlife Epidemiology.
Andrew investigates infectious and non-infectious disease threats to wildlife conservation, including disease ecology and the drivers of disease emergence and zoonotic spill-over. He has published > 400 scientific articles, including primary data and reviews on wildlife disease and emerging infectious diseases, including a seminal paper on emerging infectious disease threats to biodiversity and public health which was published in Science in 2000.
He discovered a new epidemic ranaviral disease of amphibians in Europe and he published the first definitive report of the global extinction of a species by an infectious disease. He has led several international and multi-disciplinary wildlife disease research projects, including the investigation of vulture declines in South Asia and the international team that discovered the fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis as a cause of global amphibian declines. He is a member of DEFRA’s GB Wildlife Disease Surveillance Partnership and he led the team that discovered a novel disease causing greenfinch declines in the U.K.. In 2010, he won a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award for his work on zoonotic viruses in African bats, a project which he continues to co-lead with colleagues in the Universities of Ghana and Cambridge.
>> The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
Andrew investigates infectious and non-infectious disease threats to wildlife conservation, including disease ecology and the drivers of disease emergence and zoonotic spill-over. He has published > 400 scientific articles, including primary data and reviews on wildlife disease and emerging infectious diseases, including a seminal paper on emerging infectious disease threats to biodiversity and public health which was published in Science in 2000.
He discovered a new epidemic ranaviral disease of amphibians in Europe and he published the first definitive report of the global extinction of a species by an infectious disease. He has led several international and multi-disciplinary wildlife disease research projects, including the investigation of vulture declines in South Asia and the international team that discovered the fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis as a cause of global amphibian declines. He is a member of DEFRA’s GB Wildlife Disease Surveillance Partnership and he led the team that discovered a novel disease causing greenfinch declines in the U.K.. In 2010, he won a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award for his work on zoonotic viruses in African bats, a project which he continues to co-lead with colleagues in the Universities of Ghana and Cambridge.
>> The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
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