2020-2022

2022

  • UC Davis faculty join national laboratories and colleagues at Berkeley, Irvine, Los Angeles, Riverside, and San Diego campuses to form ATTACK, a consortium charged with helping the world be prepared for the next pandemic.
  • UC Davis study links gut bacteria differences between Black and white women to insulin sensitivity.
  • UC Davis is a part of a national interdisciplinary team awarded a prestigious Convergence Accelerator Award from the National Science Foundation to expand the current functionality of the Disease BioPortal, a user-friendly platform to safeguard animal health and prevent infectious disease outbreaks on farms.
  • The Vector Genetics Laboratory in the School of Veterinary Medicine’s Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology is awarded a $10.2 million grant from Open Philanthropy to support research on human malaria in West Africa.
  • UC Davis students share their thoughts on diversity and sustainability in veterinary medicine in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.
  • UC Davis is awarded a 4-year, $1 million grant to leverage social media, disease modeling and extension to improve preparation and response to virulent Newcastle Disease.
  • UC Davis researchers link wildfire smoke exposure in early pregnancy to animal behavior.
  • UC Davis retains #1 national and #2 global QS ranking in veterinary science.
  • With the Canine Behavior Symposium, the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine returns to in-person participation at continuing education events.
  • UC Davis receives a #3 ranking from Hispanic Outlook magazine for top schools for Hispanics in graduate STEM programs in Agricultural/Animal/Plant/Veterinary Science and related fields.
  • ​​​​​​UC Davis scientists create network-based models to prioritize novel and known viruses for their risk of zoonotic transmission.
  • ​​​​​​The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention award a 5-year, $10 million grant for UC Davis to continue its work in research, training, and outreach on vectors.
  • The California Raptor Center celebrates its 50th anniversary.
  • The School of Veterinary Medicine is one of five partner institutions with the National Institute of Antimicrobial Resistance Research and Education to receive a $1.5 million cooperative agreement award from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for Veterinary Medicine, for the improvement of antibiotic stewardship.
  • The School of Veterinary Medicine achieved record totals in research and philanthropic funding for the 2021-2022 fiscal year, with $89 million received for research and $61.7 million received from philanthropic sources. The school’s scholarship endowment surpassed $100 million — a notable milestone for support of veterinary medical education.
  • UC Davis virus hunters in their search for new pathogens, to help prevent the next pandemic, are featured on CBS’ “60 Minutes.”
  • The School of Veterinary Medicine removes the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) requirement for DVM student admissions in an effort to achieve equity in access to higher education.

2021

  • Dean Michael D. Lairmore steps down after 10 years. Mark D. Stetter appointed as 9th dean of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.
  • The UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine is ranked #1 in the world for five of the last seven years by QS World University Rankings.
  • According to data from an AVMA report combined with its national ranking, UC Davis continues to offer the best value in veterinary medical education with the most optimal debt-to-income ratio of all 30 U.S. veterinary schools; has the 2nd lowest median debt of the schools; and is one of two schools with the highest median starting salary of graduates.
  • The school once again tops the rankings of all U.S. schools and colleges of veterinary medicine in the amount of funding received by the National Institutes of Health, reaching the highest-ever level of funding of $36.9M in 2020, an increase of approximately $6M from the previous year. The school also leads all veterinary schools in total research funding in the past decade, with more than $85.3M.
  • The California Veterinary Emergency Team (CVET) program launches in July 2021 through California State legislation and funding.
  • The Veterinary Scientist Training Program – a dual program for DVM/PhD students – celebrates its 20th year of training the next generation of veterinary scientists with a prestigious NIH award. This is the first year that NIH has granted the Medical Scientist Training Program award to veterinary schools.
  • The Center for Comparative Medicine relaunches as the UC Davis Center for Immunology and Infectious Diseases. The center was very active during the pandemic, and was instrumental in the first culturing of SARS-CoV-2, assisting the School of Medicine in developing the diagnostic test needed on campus.
  • The UC Davis veterinary hospital continues to achieve top levels of accreditation from the American Animal Hospital Association. Less than 15% of accredited veterinary hospitals in the U.S. and Canada receive this standard of excellence.
  • The hospital continues to pioneer clinical procedures, including the first 3D laparoscopic adrenalectomy in veterinary medicine. The surgery was made possible thanks to the generous financial support of Mary Kariotis and the UC Davis Center for Companion Animal Health Equipment Fund that allowed the hospital to purchase the 3D laparoscopic equipment.
  • CAHFS sees the first case of Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease in California, which has now been detected in six southern California counties and continues to spread north.
  • A new Davis Pet Advocacy and Wellness (PAW) clinic is established as an extension of the Mercer Veterinary Clinic for Pets of the Homeless to provide care more locally. They look to establish monthly clinics and provide hands-on experience with our veterinary students.
  • The school forms a new Community Council to enhance diversity, equity and inclusion, prioritizing action steps in each of these areas to bolster our goals of promoting a vibrant and diverse community.

2020

  • The School of Veterinary Medicine is recognized with the top spot in veterinary science in the QS World University Rankings.
  • The university reacts to a global pandemic. In addition to changing operations for safety reasons, the school becomes a prominent voice for understanding and addressing the pandemic, appearing in prestigious national and international news outlets.
  • The Community Council is created to promote diversity and inclusion.
  • The new Feline Treatment and Housing Suite is unveiled as part of Phase I of the future Veterinary Medical Center.
  • The EpiCenter for Emerging Infectious Disease Intelligence is launched to investigate viral spillover.
  • Researchers license a vaccine to prevent epizootic bovine abortion, a deadly cattle disease, and help California ranchers save millions of dollars.
  • The Veterinary Emergency Response Team responds to a record-breaking wildfire season, examining and treating more than 1,200 animals in the field while the UC Davis veterinary hospital cares for an additional 60 animals in critical condition.
  • A new Wildfire Disaster Network is formed in collaboration with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to respond and treat wildlife impacted by wildfires.
  • Students expand the Mercer Clinic for Pets of the Homeless with the PAW Clinic that provides veterinary care to the underserved.
  • The National Institute of General Medical Sciences approves funding for the first DVM/PhD Medical Scientist Training Program in the country, of which UC Davis is a recipient.
  • The school’s communications team launches Synergy, a new magazine published twice a year, to highlight feature stories, research breakthroughs, clinical advances and accomplishments of our community.
  • PREDICT, a project of the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Emerging Pandemic Threats program directed through the school’s One Health Institute, helps train approximately 7,000 One Health professionals in more than 30 countries. The program plays a critical role in the COVID19 pandemic response.
  • UC Davis researchers launch a COVID-19 tracking application.
  • A study demonstrates the first genetic link between the Toxoplasma strains in felid hosts and parasites causing fatal disease in marine wildlife.
  • Recognition of the 150th anniversary of the admission of women to the University of California includes the UC honoring three women with ties to the school: Drs. Jonna Mazet, Marguerite Pappaioanou and Elizabeth Arnold Stone.
  • The school establishes its first presidential endowed chairs, thanks to the generosity of donors. Chancellor Gary May appoints Dr. Monica Aleman as the Dr. Terry Holliday Equine and Comparative Neurology Presidential Chair and Dr. Joanne Paul-Murphy as the Messmer Family Presidential Chair in Companion Exotic Animal Medicine and Surgery.

2010-2019

2019

  • After nearly a half-century of research, Professor Emeritus Dr. Niels Pedersen discovered an effective treatment for Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP), one of the deadliest diseases in cats and caused by a feline coronavirus variant. Dr. Pedersen and his clinical trial team’s investigation of the drug GS-441524 was the first attempt in veterinary medicine to attack a fatal systemic viral disease using modern anti-viral drug technology. They discovered that the drug demonstrated the possibility of a cure for FIP and offered hope for cat lovers across the world. At the start of COVID-19 pandemic in late 2019, GS-441524 was identified as a possible treatment for humans infected by the novel mutated coronavirus, and a modified version of the drug was tested as an oral treatment for humans with COVID-19.
  • The UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine passes accreditation from the American Veterinary Medical Association.
  • The school continues to be ranked #1 by US News & World Report in its every-four-year rankings and #2 world-wide in the annual QS World Rankings.
  • The school achieves another milestone in clinical equine imaging with the first successful use of positron emission tomography (PET) on a standing horse. Equine PET, pioneered at UC Davis with the first horse imaged in April 2015, previously required patients to be under general anesthesia.
  • Dean Lairmore is appointed president of the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges (AAVMC).
  • The School of Veterinary Medicine and Graduate School of Management jointly launch a new Foundations of Veterinary Business program to provide a cost-effective and time efficient opportunity for students to develop solid business foundations and practical skills required to manage and lead successful veterinary practices.
  • The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) releases the 2019 Economic State of the Veterinary Profession. The data regarding student debt and post-graduation salaries, combined with its rankings, prove UC Davis to be the best value in veterinary education.
  • The U.S. Agency for International Development awards up to $85 million over the next five years to the University of California, Davis One Health Institute and consortium partners to implement the One Health Workforce—Next Generation project.
  • A $50,000 anonymous donation secures a PRISMAX hemodialysis machine, the next generation of acute care technology in hemodialysis and blood purification. The acquisition makes UC Davis the only veterinary school in the nation with this high-tech piece of equipment.
  • Dr. Jamie Peyton named an ‘Innovator of the Year’ by the UC Davis Chancellor’s Innovation Awards for her successful and groundbreaking use of tilapia fish skin to treat animals with burn wounds.
  • An investigation of an epidemic of Rocky Mountain spotted fever in Mexico led by Dr. Janet Foley has implications for the spread of this tick-borne disease to the U.S. This type of scientific collaboration across borders allows impact of critical research discoveries worldwide.

2018

  • The school is recognized with the top spot in veterinary science in the 2018 QS World University Rankings for the fourth consecutive year.
  • The school’s $85 million high-impact transdisciplinary research budget funds a research enterprise larger than any other veterinary schools by more than $30 million.
  • UC Davis veterinary hospital starts imaging patients on a new volumetric PET/CT scanner known as the Mini Explorer II. This advanced imaging system, the first of its kind in the world, is designed to provide veterinarians with both anatomic and physiologic information.
  • Following the initial detection of virulent Newcastle disease (vND) through a routine submission to the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratories (CAHFS), which was confirmed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), CAHFS continues working with the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA), USDA and poultry owners to contain and eradicate this foreign animal disease.
  • Center for Animal Disease Modeling and Surveillance (CADMS) led by Dr. Beatriz Martínez López is formally recognized by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations as an FAO Reference Center for Veterinary Epidemiology.
  • Dr. Gregory Ferraro is honored for his lasting impact on equine health and research with the announcement of a new endowed directorship in his name. Dean Michael Lairmore appoints Dr. Carrie Finno as the inaugural holder.
  • Dr. John Madigan receives a special Congressional certificate for his help in saving animals in the aftermath of fires in Napa and Sonoma counties.
  • The Global Virome Project, a 10-year effort to identify most viruses with potential to cause disease in humans, is launched.
  • Pandemic risk is reduced globally through PREDICT training of more than 4,000 professionals world-wide, building a global early warning system for emerging diseases that move between wildlife and people.
  • The Planetary Health Center of Expertise is established through the UC Global Health Institute, with Dr. Woutrina Smith serving as co-director

2017

  • The school is once again recognized with the top spot in veterinary science in the latest QS World University Rankings. UC Davis is renowned for applying a “One Health” approach to addressing critical health concerns on a local and global scale.
  • Dr. Amy Kapatkin and the Orthopedic Surgery Service implement the use of a bone growth stimulator to repair bone injuries in dogs’ legs. The technique is successful in 11 dogs, with nine returning to full function and two with acceptable function. All 11 cases involve dogs with nonunion fractures in their limbs where the bone had failed to re-unite despite previous surgical attempts.
  • Drs. Boaz Arzi and Frank Verstraete of the Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service, along with researcher Dr. Dori Borjesson, continue to have success with a novel stem cell approach to treating feline chronic gingivostomatitis (FCGS). Successful implementation of the stem cell therapy has resulted in complete remission of the disease in many cats in the study, and holds hope for humans suffering a similar oral disease.
  • On October 13, 2017, Chancellor Gary May and Dean Michael Lairmore announce plans to raise $115 million in philanthropic support to update and improve three critical areas of the UC Davis Veterinary Medical Center: the Livestock and Field Service Center, the Equine Performance Center and the All-Species Imaging Center. This the first phase of a $500 million campaign titled  “Leading the Way.” It marks the first phase in a long-term plan to transform the UC Davis hospital into the Veterinary Medical Center.
  • UC Davis celebrates the one-year anniversary of positron emission tomography (PET) at the school. Images of PET scans digitally fused with CT scans detect lesions not visible on CT scans alone, and are leading to treatment plans for horses with lameness injuries that were previously undetectable or impossible to pinpoint.
  • Dr. Michael Kent, Director of the Center for Companion Animal Health, collaborates with radiation oncologists at the UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center on a unique strategy to advance a novel cancer treatment for animals and humans. One immune therapy that the two groups test successfully shrinks the metastatic lung cancer in Kent’s dog patients and will enter clinical trials in people at the UC Davis School of Medicine.
  • Equine specialists utilize new overground videoendoscopy to help diagnose upper airway respiratory disorders in horses. This new technology allows veterinarians to exercise the horse in its normal environment, such as a track or an arena rather than on a treadmill, and obtain live video of laryngeal function.
  • Dr. Josh Stern of the Cardiology Service, working with a team of researchers and physicians, discovers a new drug to treat hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). HCM affects both animals and humans and is the most common heart disease in cats. The drug, MYK-461, is shown to eliminate left ventricular obstruction in five cats with HCM.
  • Dr. Larry Cowgill, with the Blood Purification and Hemodialysis Unit, continues to advance the use of therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) as a state-of-the-art blood purification procedure.
  • Dr. Michele Steffey of the Soft Tissue Surgery Service uses transnare cryoablation to treat nasal adenocarcinoma in dogs, an approach that attracts clients from across the country. Her innovative use of intraoperative near-infrared imaging may become the optimal protocol for care.
  • A pair of English bulldog puppies born with spina bifida are the first patients to be successfully treated with a unique therapy—a combination of surgery and stem cells—developed at UC Davis by a team of veterinary (Drs. Dori Borjesson and Bev Sturges) and human medicine researchers and clinicians (Drs. Diana Farmer and Aijun Wang).
  • Faculty members Drs. Frank Verstraete and Boaz Arzi and resident Dr. Colleen Geisbush of the Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service utilize a new 3D printed face mask they developed with biomedical engineering students to successfully treat a dog with a fractured cheekbone and jawbone. The Exo-K9 Exoskeleton mask, designed to be used as a cast for a fractured skull while it heals, is the result of a long-standing collaboration between the oral surgeons and the UC Davis College of Engineering.
  • Researchers led by Dr. Danika Bannasch, a veterinary geneticist, discover a genetic mutation across dog breeds that is responsible for chondrodystrophy (the skeletal disorder leading to shorter legs and abnormal intervertebral discs).
  • Beginning in January 2017, licensure is now required for veterinarians who participate in patient care within universities in California. Previously veterinarians were exempt in recognition of the level of advanced training needed to maintain the quality of our clinical programs worldwide, and the need to be able to recruit internationally for this expertise. Administrators from UC Davis and Western University of Health Sciences work with the California Veterinary Medical Board (CVMB) to develop a University Veterinary License exam which is taken by more than 80 faculty and residents.
  • More than 100 alumni and faculty gather to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Masters in Preventive Veterinary Medicine (MPVM) program. The MPVM program, established in 1967, has graduated more than 1,000 trained veterinary professionals who support global health in 87 countries. MPVM grads are trained to investigate and evaluate disease and production problems in animal populations and to design and implement disease control programs.
  • The UC Veterinary Medical Center – San Diego (UCVMC-SD) opens a second cardiology service location in San Marcos. Board-certified cardiologists Tim Hodge and Joao Orvalho offer a wide array of medical and interventional cardiology procedures and consultative services.
  • Studies coordinated by the school show that the Southern California mountain lions’ genetic connectivity is dangerously low due to inbreeding as a result of the puma’s isolation. The puma population is constrained by the surrounding urbanization from Los Angeles and San Diego and puma movements in and out of the Santa Ana Mountains requires them to cross Interstate 15, an 8-10 lane highway.
  • The equine genetic and ophthalmology teams work together to develop a screening test for ocular squamous cell carcinoma (eye cancer) in Haflinger Horses. The test will help horse owners and veterinarians identify horses at the highest risk of developing this cancer.
  • Nearly 1,100 shelters have participated in the Million Cat Challenge co-founded by Kate Hurley, Director of the Koret Shelter Medicine Program at the school. The five year challenge has saved more than 750,000 cats in just three years.
  • The school’s leadership officially launches the 2018-23 strategic planning initiative to guide the school’s next five years. This initiative builds upon the very successful 2012-17 strategic plan and subsequent implementation effort.
  • The Veterinary Medicine Student Services and Administration Center new facility opens. Housing 100 staff and school leaders, this facility completes the school’s move from Haring Hall to the Health Sciences District.
  • For nearly a month the school helps with search and rescue and veterinary care of animals injured and/or displaced by the California wildfires that ravaged much of the Napa Valley area. In total, 29 veterinarians and students serve displaced animals in the fire zones. On campus, the veterinary hospital receives 77 animals over three weeks – one dog, one goose, one chicken, two llamas, 14 horses, 25 cats, and 33 koi fish.
  • The Center for Equine Health hosts a One Health Initiative with the UC Davis School of Medicine and the Connected Horse, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the lives of those affected by dementia. Seven couples participate in workshops capitalizing on the horse’s ability to read emotions and exercises to help the human patient and caregiver to get in touch with themselves and each other. Participants report decreased anxiety and depression, better sleep quality and a stronger sense of social support.
  • The PREDICT project, led by the school’s One Health Institute has been working since 2009 to identify viruses in wildlife around the world with the potential for zoonotic outbreaks in an effort to allow governments to design policies that can better deal with pandemic outbreaks. This worldwide collaboration, including scientists, government personnel, physicians, veterinarians, biologists, laboratory technicians, students and members of the general public from across 35 countries in Asia and Africa.
  • Forty-three students participated in the STAR (Students Training in Advanced Research) Program in 2017. Funding is offered on a competitive basis to veterinary students to experience veterinary and biomedical research during the summer months.
  • The school’s Development Team worked with school leaders, faculty, donors, alumni and friends to raise a total of $55.5 million for academic year 2016-17 — the most philanthropic support ever raised in one year.
  • To promote best practices as veterinary educators, faculty are engaged in both a Regional Teaching Academy (RTA) and a local UC Davis Teaching Academy. The local academy is an outgrowth of the RTA which was formed as an initiative of the Consortium of Western Regional Colleges of Veterinary Medicine. Faculty are learning new ways to foster engagement in the classroom, assist students with deep understanding and improved information retrieval, and promote life-long learning through these initiatives.

2016

  • The school is again ranked number 1 in veterinary science by the Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) World University Rankings, widely considered to be one of the most influential international university rankings providers based on scholarly metrics.
  • Dr. Jonna Mazet heads up a global group, PREDICT, whose researchers and scientists have helped identify more than 800 viruses worldwide that have the potential to “spill over” from wildlife to humans — from Ebola to West Nile to Zika. The initial 5-year grant was funded at $75 million and renewed in 2014 for an additional 5 years at $100 million.
  • The ground-breaking research on the use of mesenchymal stem cells for the treatment of chronic stomatitis in cats results in one patent and two publications. Clinical trials are expanded to a two-center trial with Cornell University, and efforts are made to bring this therapy to a human clinical trial.
  • The Clinical Cardiology Laboratory is established under the direction of Dr. Lance Visser. This new space provides additional equipment and resources to complete cutting-edge clinical trial research, an area in which the cardiology team is heavily involved. The addition of this laboratory makes UC Davis one of only a handful of locations with both a molecular and clinical cardiology research space that bring cutting-edge medical information to clinical patients before it is even published.
  • Equine surgeons Jorge Nieto and Julie Dechant work with small animal surgeon Bill Culp to successfully implant the first urethral stent for the treatment of a urethral stricture in a stallion.
  • The Million Cat Challenge, a partnership with the University of Florida Maddie’s Shelter Medicine Program, passes the halfway milestone, marking 500,000 lives saved by the more than 1,000 shelters enrolled in the challenge. The program's goal is to save one million cat lives in 5 years by focusing on five key initiatives: Alternatives to Intake; Managed Admission; Capacity for Care; Removing Barriers to Adoption; and Return to Field.
  • Dr. Jane Sykes is appointed as the Chief Veterinary Medical Officer of the William R. Pritchard Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital and as Associate Dean of Veterinary Medical Center Operation. She has responsibility for the management and fiscal integrity of the veterinary hospital, ensuring the academic quality of the clinical learning environment for DVM students and house officers and provision of state-of-the-art clinical care.
  • The Zoological Medicine Service provides state-of-the-art care to the animals at the Sacramento Zoo, including the first birth of a giraffe at the zoo in nearly 30 years.
  • The Zoological Medicine Service, in collaboration with the Anatomic Pathology Service, discovers a new amdoparvovirus in red pandas.
  • Dr. Chris Barker leads a team working to design computer models based on satellite observations provided by NASA in hopes of gaining a better understanding of the threat posed to the U.S. by mosquito-borne viruses like Zika, Chikungunya and dengue.
  • Dr. Isaac Pessah, working with collaborators from the Institute for Neurosciences in Grenoble, France and the Pasteur Institute in Tunisia, has conducted research that shows that a particular family of toxins, the calcins, found in some scorpion venom, might also have a unique beneficial function. The toxic peptide is not supposed to get inside cells, but it does and then is phosphorylated, which not only neutralizes its toxicity, but also reprograms its activity to be beneficial. Ultimately this discovery could help to develop a novel strategy to control ryanodine receptor channels that leak calcium—known to contribute to a number of human and animal diseases.
  • Dr. Pamela Hullinger is appointed Director of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System (CAHFS). She has the leadership responsibility to ensure the capability of providing complete and timely diagnostic services with state of the art technology to control transboundary animal disease and other diseases that threaten the viability of California livestock and poultry industries.
  • The Mercer Vet Clinic for the Pets of the Homeless opens their new facility in Sacramento, the "Tom Kendall Teaching Clinic." This volunteer clinic, started in 1992 by UC Davis students, addresses a critical societal need, provides students with a real-world learning experience and honors a longtime colleague for his commitment to both the clinic and teaching students.
  • The school is once again leading the nation's veterinary schools in total extramural contracts and grant funding at $75,747,241, well ahead of the second-highest-funded school.
  • The Alex A. Ardans Tulare Branch Laboratory of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System is officially dedicated October 28th, honoring the outstanding contributions of former director and long-time faculty member Alex Ardans, an expert in the field of veterinary diagnostics. Ardans oversaw the operational transition of the laboratory system from the state to the school, and led the subsequent successful partnership between the school and CDFA for more than two decades.
  • Gorilla Doctors, part of the school’s One Health Institute, is the subject of a featured story on the CBS show “60 Minutes” on October 9th. There are only about 950 mountain gorillas left on Earth. Habitat loss, poaching, and disease have made them one of the most endangered animals alive. But their numbers are rising, thanks in large part to Gorilla Doctors. The team has 16 doctors who operate all across the gorilla’s territory, a vast rainforest that spans three countries — Rwanda, Uganda and  the Democratic Republic of Congo.
  • The veterinary hospital acquires a positron emission tomography (PET) scanner, becoming the first veterinary facility in the world to utilize the imaging technology for research and clinical studies on lameness diagnosis in horses.
  • Dr.  Robert Brosnan develops patent-pending technology in hopes of discovering safer, and more cost-effective, general anesthetics for animals and people. General anesthetics have been used in surgery for 170 years, but anesthetics haven’t changed markedly since before the U.S. Civil War. He’s now working with a biomedical startup company that has raised more than $1 million toward revolutionizing anesthesia.
  • The J.D. Wheat Veterinary Orthopedic Research Laboratory team has discovered that the majority of catastrophic racing and training bone fractures and joint injuries have pre-existing bone remodeling or stress fractures at the site of their fatal injury, meaning that catastrophic injuries are preventable.
  • After more than 50 years of research, the tick-borne bacterium responsible for “foothill abortion disease,” one of the most devastating cattle diseases in the Western United States, is named and genetically characterized by school researchers as “Pajaroellobacter abortibovis.”

2015

  • The UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine is ranked #1 in veterinary science by the Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) World University Rankings, widely considered to be one of the most influential international university rankings providers based on scholarly metrics. This is the first year that veterinary science has been included in these rankings.
  • The UC Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine is ranked #1 by U.S. News and World Report.
  • The Livestock Herd Health and Reproduction Service worked with a client in Nevada to bring Gascon cattle, a French breed used primarily for beef production, to the U.S. for the first time.
  • The Ophthalmology team performed a lip commissure to eyelid transposition for the first time. The surgery created new eyelids from cheek/lip tissue for cats with eyelid agenesis.
  • The California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System protects animal health through early detection of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) in a commercial poultry operation in Kings County, CA. Early identification allows for containment before a widespread state-wide outbreak could occur.
  • The Cardiology Service establishes a relationship with the UC Davis Medical Center Pediatric Cardiology Service and works together to repair rare congenital heart defects in a cat and a dog. The cat’s story (Vanilla Bean) is covered by more than 200 media outlets nationwide, including The New York Times and ABC News.
  • Dr. John Madigan’s “squeeze technique” to treat neonatal maladjustment syndrome, which may have a connection to autism, is featured in hundreds of publications throughout the world and the YouTube video of the story is viewed more than 250,000 times. Drs. Madigan and Monica Aleman noticed that the hormones that keep the foal asleep in utero are significantly elevated in these foals suggesting that they need to “wake up.” By applying a simple squeeze technique to simulate the 20-30 minutes of getting squeezed in the birth canal, they’ve had remarkable success. The technique would later be tested in other mammals who have similar signs at birth.
  • The Cardiology Service expands imaging capabilities with the addition of a high frequency transesophageal echocardiography probe, which allows the use of ultrasound guidance during cardiac procedures to repair congenital heart defects.
  • Using intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), reproduction specialists are successful in assisting with the first foal ever born at UC Davis by in-vitro fertilization.
  • Clues about veterinary medicine—filmed at UC Davis—appear on three episodes of nationally televised game show “Jeopardy.”
  • Drs. Claudia Sonder and John Madigan lead the school's team to help support the animals and their owners displaced by the Valley Fire crisis. In concert with county animal control, OES emergency response and CVMA disaster response leaders, the school's Veterinary Emergency Response Team (VERT) team is activated to help locate animals for transport to temporary animal shelters, to provide food and water to stranded livestock and assist with animal health needs. On September 14, the veterinary hospital receives the first of what would become dozens of animals from the Valley and Butte Fires over the following three weeks. In total, the hospital treats 56 animals – 40 cats, 5 chickens, 4 horses, 2 pigs, 2 goats, 2 dogs, and 1 rabbit. The hospital team, already at 90 percent capacity with client patients, works long hours (volunteering nights and weekends) in order to accommodate the sudden influx of critical patients.
  • A new, state-of-the-art diagnostic imaging laboratory (Comparative Ophthalmic Imaging Lab), is established which will be used both for clinical patients and clinical trials.
  • The Anatomic Pathology Service develops digital pathology, which will enhance the hospital’s ability to interact remotely, and more accurately assess morphometrics of tissues.
  • The Veterinary Medical Teaching and Research Center (VMTRC) in Tulare launches a new internship focused on dairy nutrition and feeding systems. In partnership with the California Dairy Research Foundation, this new program will train future leaders in feed manufacturing, dairy feeding systems, nutrient management and feed and food safety.
  • In collaboration with the School of Medicine and College of Biological Sciences, the school opens the new Health Sciences District Advanced Imaging Facility which features a Leica 3d STED Super Optical Confocal Microscope – which can image structures below the limit of diffraction in 3D, a high speed resonance scanner that allows the use of live samples, and a Multiphoton Confocal with CLARITY which permits intravital live imaging and high resolution 3D images of whole tissues/samples.
  • Veterinary, engineering and agricultural students collaborate to create the Pastured Poultry Farm. The students build the Eggmobile (a miniature 32-nest chicken barn on wheels) to shelter the 150 chickens and fertilize the grass as it travels around the pasture. The goal is to improve pasture-based poultry farms, integrate crop and poultry farms, and research chicken health, diseases, predators and workers’ occupational health hazards. Each week, 800 eggs are produced and donated to the Yolo County Food Bank for community support.

2014

  • SeaDoc Society scientists and collaborators throughout the country publish a paper linking a densovirus to sea star wasting disease. The scientists demonstrate that the mysterious virus is involved in the deaths of millions of sea stars along the West Coast and has infected more than 20 species. The same virus has been found in museum specimens of sea stars collected decades ago, suggesting that a mutation in the virus may have prompted the outbreak, considered the largest marine disease outbreak in history.
  • Dr. Lisa Miller proves that exposure to high levels of fine particle pollution affects lung function and development of the immune system in monkeys living outdoors at the California National Primate Research Center. When Northern California wildfires pushed smoke across the Sacramento Valley in 2008, Miller, head of the respiratory unit, measured levels of small particles at the UC Davis campus over a period of 10 days of peak air pollution. Levels rose to 50 to 60 micrograms per cubic meter. Some readings reached nearly 80 micrograms per cubic meter, well over the federal standard of 35 micrograms per cubic meter. She tested lung function and took blood samples from monkeys that were two to three months old and noted particular issues in young animals and females.
  • One of the first residencies in reproductive medicine of companion animals begins through the Small Animal Theriogenology Service at the veterinary hospital. With support from the American Kennel Club and the Theriogenology Foundation, the program provides specialty training in all aspects of reproductive medicine and surgery, obstetrics and neonatology.
  • T-cells (lymphocytes) in humans and other mammals ignore normal biologic protocol and swing into high gear when attacked by certain fast-moving bacteria, reports immunologist Stephen McSorley, of the Center for Comparative Medicine. McSorley's team is the first to define the specific immune pathway, which provides critical information for designing future vaccines and medicines to prevent or treat deadly infections, particularly from Salmonella and Chlamydia.
  • Reproductive physiologist Alan Conley characterizes the hormone dihydroprogesterone, DHP, which may lead to better hormone therapies for preventing pre-term labor in pregnant women. His work ends a 50-year mystery as to how horses sustain the last half of their pregnancies without detectable progesterone in their bloodstreams. Wildlife species may also benefit from Conley's findings.
  • Geneticist Danika Bannasch identifies the genetic mutation responsible for a form of cleft palate in the Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever. Insights from the discovery, based on the first dog model for the craniofacial defect, may lead to a better understanding of cleft palate in humans. Although cleft palate is one of the most common birth defects, affecting approximately one in 1,500 live human births in the US, it is not completely understood. Graduate student Zena T. Wolf and oral surgeon Boaz Arzi co-author the transdisciplinary study.
  • The veterinary hospital launches the Integrative Medicine Service, expanding its offerings of acupuncture, physical rehabilitation, and chiropractic procedures, as well as exploring future offerings such as pallative care and alternative methods of pain management.
  • Dr. Nicola Pusterla develops the first structured approach to investigate and control infectious disorders in horses using epidemiology, clinical understanding, diagnostics, prevention and treatment. His research focuses on equine herpesvirus-1 (he is a critical resource for horse owners during EHV-1 outbreaks of in 2011 and 2012), equine influenza, equine coronavirus, equine protozoal myeloencephalitis and other diseases. Pusterla’s review of 268 horses from eight outbreaks of equine coronavirus in six states outlines length of infectiousness, common clinical signs and the most effective testing method.
  • Food animal veterinarian James S. Cullor, long-time director of the Dairy Food Safety Laboratory, shares practical, proven dairy management techniques with veterinarians, veterinary students and government officials in Rwanda as part of the UC Davis Global HealthShare Initiative. The team focuses on low milk yields caused frequently by mastitis, a bacterial infection of the udder that reduces milk production, causes milk to be unfit for sale and may result in cow death. The training program can help farmers increase milk production to feed their families and provide a safer product.
  • A team led by veterinary cardiologist Joshua Stern identifies a gene mutation responsible for canine subvalvular aortic stenosis, the most common inherited heart disease in dogs. The potentially lethal congenital disease also affects children and other dog breeds. The new knowledge will help breeders make informed decisions about the health of their dogs.
  • A study shows that the bluetongue virus, costing US cattle and sheep industries $125 million annually, survives the winter by reproducing in the biting midge that transmits it. The findings are particularly significant as global climate change brings more moderate winter temperatures around the world. Co-authors include Christie Ellen Mayo, virologist N. James MacLachlan, William K. Reisen, an entomologist, Cameron J. Osborne and Ian Gardner, an epidemiologist specializing in studies of food animal disease.
  • Dr. Patricia Pesavento, working with members of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory, discovers a new virus associated with brain inflammation in cattle. After ruling out several possible causes of neurological disease, the scientists perform genetic analysis, made possible by the Human Genome Project, and pinpoint a new astrovirus, which they name BoAstV-NeuroS1. The ability to diagnose the problem may aid in finding new treatments and helps diagnosticians rule out reportable diseases such as rabies.
  • When the Ebola crisis hits countries in West Africa, veterinary medicine researchers from the school head to the frontline. They serve a critical role by conducting laboratory testing to identify cases so that rapid tracing of patient-contacts could begin, thereby reducing the transmission of the disease. These researchers, graduates of the Veterinary Scientist Training Program, have the joint skillset of a DVM and PhD—making them invaluable in situations like this Ebola outbreak where emerging and zoonotic diseases can have such a devastating impact.
  • UC Davis leads the nation’s veterinary schools with $74 million in research funding for the fiscal year 2013-2014. Many research findings can be translated from veterinary medicine to human medicine.
  • The school successfully achieved an ambitious goal of raising $160 million in philanthropic gifts as part of The Campaign for UC Davis, an 8-year comprehensive fundraising effort. More than half of this total— over $80 million—was directed to research and program support, and nearly $32 million went to help students.
  • Shelter medicine was recognized as a veterinary specialty by the American Veterinary Medical Association board, thanks in large part to the dedicated efforts of Kate Hurley, associate director of the UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program.
  • The school’s One Health approach is highlighted by the PREDICT program—a project of the One Health Institute that received a $100 million grant from USAID to continue the work of preventing pandemics.
  • UC Davis researchers presented a study representing the largest genetic sampling of mountain lions in Southern California, which supported concerns regarding loss of genetic diversity due to animal populations being cut off from each other by freeways and human development.
  • Veterinary students won the inaugural Veterinary Innovation Challenge with a clever idea for owners to better care for their pets using smart phone technology.
  • In a follow-up to a previous study of the effects of neutering, it was discovered that neutering poses more health risks for Golden Retrievers than Labrador Retrievers.
  • Researchers solved a century-old mystery when they determined the survival mechanism for bluetongue virus, a serious disease that annually costs U.S. cattle and sheep industries an estimated $125 million.
  • Veterinary oral surgeons increased the scope of their novel jawbone regrowth surgeries by successfully performing a nearly complete lower jaw reconstruction in a dog that lost part of her jaw to cancer.
  • Thanks to surgical techniques developed in a veterinary clinical trial, a veterinary ophthalmologist was able to successfully treat cornea disease in a dog and hopes to discover the gene causing the disease.
  • UC Davis’ Western Institute for Food Safety and Security provides guidance for California dairy farmers and ranchers with information on ongoing drought through workshops, assistance application sessions and on-line resources. The California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory system publishes a special report on drought-related feed toxicity to build public awareness of this health risk.
  • The California Raptor Center releases a young, female golden eagle after more than eight months of treatment and rehabilitation for a novel mite infestation, first identified by UC Davis veterinary epidemiologists.
  • The Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service collaborates with the Biomedical Engineering Department on the use of 3D printing of skulls for the treatment planning of challenging maxillofacial cases. This is now an integral part of the service.
  • UC Davis leads all veterinary schools in research funding at $65 million.
  • Oiled Wildlife Care Network (OWCN) Director Mike Ziccardi is called to Bangladesh to help with an oil spill. A cargo ship rammed a tanker in Bangladesh’s Sela River in December of 2014, spilling 92,000 gallons of oil into the worlds’ largest mangrove forest. Dr. Ziccardi spent 2 weeks helping during the spill’s aftermath.
  • The Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service begins the use of cone-beam computed tomography as a routine procedure for advanced diagnostic imaging of dental, maxillofacial and temporomandibular joint disorders in dogs, cats and rabbits.
  • Dr. Patricia Conrad is appointed as the first Associate Dean for Global Programs. She is responsible for developing a vision, mission, and strategic plan to foster global programs in education, research, service, outreach and engagement; creating databases to track faculty and student projects globally; building extra-mural resources for global programs and identifying potential partnerships with investigators seeking support through sponsored research related to the school’s mission.
  • Equine researchers unveil ramifications to human health in their research into equine injuries. Peta L. Hitchens, Ashley E. Hill and Susan M. Stover, collaborating at the JD Wheat Veterinary Orthopedic Research Laboratory, analyze data from a six-year period during which 707 Thoroughbred and Quarter horses experienced race-related catastrophic injury or sudden death and find that jockeys are 171 times more likely to be injured when they ride a horse that dies in a race. Two studies describe in detail the types of equine injury associated with falls. The scientists conclude that "prevention of the most common catastrophic injuries and conditions of the racehorse, e.g., fetlock injuries, may be most effective at decreasing rates of falls and injuries to horseracing jockeys during racing."

2013

  • Twenty-one years of genetic research into vectorborne diseases leads to the discovery that two key subgroups of malaria-causing mosquitoes, while genetically distinct, can and do exchange genes due to crossbreeding. Medical entomologists Gregory Lanzaro and Yoosook Lee explain that developing an accurate picture of gene flow through matings within and between these two mosquito groups could prove key to preventing malaria, which kills more than 660,000 people each year around the world, mostly in Africa. The researchers continue to investigate the role of insecticide resistance in different types of mosquitoes.
  • To accelerate the identification and development of diagnostics and therapeutics nationwide for the benefit of veterinary and human patients, Dean Michael D. Lairmore initiates the launch of the Veterinary Center for Clinical Trials. More than 40 clinical trials are in progress at the outset.
  • A new TrueBeam linear accelerator allows UC Davis radiation oncologists to deliver more powerful cancer treatments with pinpoint accuracy and precision. It uniquely integrates new imaging and motion management technologies within a sophisticated new architecture that makes it possible to deliver treatments more quickly while monitoring and compensating for tumor motion, opening the door to new possibilities for a wide range of treatment options. The matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometer, made possible with support from the DMARLOU Foundation, is the most advanced diagnostic tool for rapid identification of bacterial and fungal organisms. The instrument significantly shortens the time required to initiate patient care/treatment.
  • Postdoctoral fellow Chelsea Rochman of the Aquatic Health Program finds that when marine creatures ingest plastics in the ocean, they may receive not only the ill effects of the plastic, but also damage from pollutants those plastics absorb while floating in the open seas. She notes that the most commonly produced plastics also absorb the most chemicals, and for longer periods of time than previously thought.
  • A national leader in veterinary research, the school celebrated the opening of Veterinary Medicine 3B—a leading-edge biomedical research facility dedicated to a variety of issues such as environmental pollution, food safety, public health, and infectious diseases, including those that can be passed between animals and humans.
  • Dr. Leigh Griffiths, assistant professor of cardiology and cardiac surgeon at the school, teamed with three biomedical engineers from the campus to develop a new approach to heart valve replacement— potentially giving transplant patients longer, healthier lives. Their collaboration won the annual UC Davis Graduate School of Management’s Big Bang! Business Plan Competition.
  • Studies from the newly dedicated Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center discovered the presence of brucellosis in harbor seals and the H1N1 flu strain in elephant seals, increasing the understanding of One Health issues among humans, animals and the environment. Years of research by the center also contributed to California’s ban on lead ammunition.
  • The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security remains on the frontlines of protecting the nation’s food supply thanks to a $10.5 M grant renewal from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the next five years. The center is heavily focused on assisting the FDA with the national implementation of the proposed Produce Safety Rule and part of the Food Safety Modernization Act.
  • Veterinary and human surgeons teamed up to perform the first canine laryngectomy to save the life of Bean, a shelter rescue.
  • Danika Bannasch was appointed as the inaugural recipient of the Maxine Adler Endowed Chair in Genetics.
  • The Koret Shelter Medicine Program developed the UC Davis Virtual Consultant, a free online self-evaluation tool for shelter staff, veterinarians, and volunteers world-wide to help improve the well-being of shelter animals.
  • Staff member Harold Davis, manager of the Emergency & Critical Care Service, was selected as the 2013 Western Veterinary Conference Veterinary Technician Continuing Educator of the Year. Davis, who has worked at the VMTH for more than 30 years, is an outstanding example of the dedicated, professional team of staff supporting the clinical service, research and teaching missions of the school.
  • Dr. Isaac Pessah is appointed Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Education. He is responsible for leadership of the Research and Graduate Education Office, administrative oversight of contracts and grants, enhancing the school’s research portfolio by regular analysis of extramural funding opportunities, developing and implementing strategic approaches to increase competitiveness of individual faculty or faculty groups in research and providing administrative leadership to increase training grants, program projects, and center grants within the school.
  • Dr. Sean Owens is appointed Associate Dean for Student Programs. He is responsible for leadership of the Student Programs Office; provision and coordination of support services for professional students; management of the DVM admissions process, pre-veterinary outreach activities including diversity and career advising, and student ceremonies.
  • Dr. Claudia Sonder is appointed Director of the Center for Equine Health (CEH). She will provide leadership of the CEH, manage the U.S. Department of Agriculture certified Contagious Equine Metritis isolation facility and testing center, and act as a liaison between the school and the equine industry in California and nationally.
  • Dr. Michael Kent is appointed as Director of the Center for Companion Animal Health (CCAH). He has responsibility for ensuring the CCAH promotes the health of small companion animals through enhanced support of teaching, research, and patient care programs, management of allied facilities and competitive grants programs, and promotion of the achievements of the center.

2012

  • An international team led by Dr. Stephen J. McSorley of the Center for Comparative Medicine takes a vital step toward the development of an effective vaccine against Salmonella, a group of increasingly antibiotic-resistant foodborne bacteria that kills hundreds of thousands of people worldwide each year. McSorley describes common antibody responses in mice and humans, which could prove helpful in developing vaccines for particular Salmonella infections. Prevention is a global health priority as antibiotics prove less effective in fighting the pathogen.
  • Veterinary oral surgeons Frank J.M. Verstraete and Boaz Arzi, working with biomedical engineers, prove that an experimental reconstructive procedure can regrow jawbones in dogs that have lost bone to injuries or removal of cancerous tumors. Early success with eight canine patients indicates that this data will translate into practical biomedical treatments in human and veterinary medicine.
  • Faculty, staff and administrators implement a five-year strategic plan to integrate initiatives related to the school’s mission, curriculum, faculty recruitment, research, clinical service, finances and infrastructure.
  • Dr. Pamela Lein organizes a $17 million research center dedicated to identifying medical countermeasures for chemicals that cause seizures in humans and animals. The goal of the CounterACT Center of Excellence, part of an NIH network, is to identify biomarkers of neurotoxicity and therapeutic strategies following developmental, occupational or acute exposures. The research is also expected to help improve medical treatment of seizure disorders in people.
  • As part of a national, targeted surveillance program, personnel from the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory help identify the fourth case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy to occur in the United States and determine that the animal had the “atypical” form of the disease. This form is not associated with previous BSE outbreaks in humans, and the cow, an older animal, does not enter the food supply.
  • The school initiates an ambitious program of "molecular food safety," the interagency 100,000 Foodborne Pathogen Genome Project. The aim is to sequence the genomes of 100,000 infectious microorganisms and speed diagnosis of foodborne diseases using precision methods. The team, led by microbiologist Bart C. Weimer, develops a public database of Salmonella, E. coli and Listeria monocytogenes bacteria, as well as common foodborne and waterborne viruses, that sicken people and animals.
  • Dr. Kate Hopper, whose specialty is emergency and critical care medicine, treats a paralyzed border collie, placing the patient on a ventilator for 22 days until he can breathe and move again on his own. Knowledge gleaned from this rare case increases understanding of mechanical ventilation in veterinary practice.
  • Food animal researchers join a $25 million USDA effort to prevent potentially fatal illnesses linked to Shiga toxin-producing E. coli bacteria. James Cullor, Dairy Food Safety Laboratory, conducts research aimed at reducing microbial counts on cattle hides during processing and tests radiofrequency technologies to inactivate E. coli on beef carcasses. Drs. Terry Lehenbauer and Sharif Aly, faculty of the Veterinary Medicine Teaching and Research Center in Tulare, use data from preliminary studies to improve understanding of the epidemiology and ecology of the pathogen and develop the scientific protocols for animal-sampling projects.

2011

  • In the 1990s, faculty characterized the bluetongue virus genome and virulence factors affecting international trade and developed improved diagnostics (an innovative ELISA, or enzyme immunoassay) and vaccines for the disease. Dr. N. James MacLachlan and colleagues now report drastic regional alterations in the global distribution of the infection since 1998, particularly in Europe. Multiple novel serotypes are detected in the Southeastern United States, and variants of the typical virus appear in the Middle East and Australia. The researchers suspect that global climate change influences these events as outbreaks occur with regular frequency, especially at the upper and lower limits of the virus’ global range where infection is highly seasonal.
  • The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory Forensic Unit provides the first DNA analysis successfully used in animal cruelty prosecutions in New York City, with the lab's evidence resulting in two felony convictions.
  • Faculty implement the first year of their student-centered curriculum, which radically changes course work, teaching methods and clinical training to best prepare veterinary graduates to enter practice. For the next several years, faculty successfully juggle quarter and semester schedules as they transition to the new curriculum. Students gain additional clinical experience (48 weeks total), with core rotations and electives based on specific interests. The added rotations prepare students to accomplish entry-level standards of clinical proficiency combined with some higher-level competencies.
  • Equine veterinarians and diagnosticians provide critical care services and timely guidelines that help California halt a serious outbreak of the rare and highly contagious equine herpes virus-1.
  • Endocrinologist Peter Havel and his team find that the hormone leptin actually lowers blood sugar levels in mice prone to type 2 diabetes. This knowledge may lead to better diabetes treatments in humans.
  • Comparative cancer specialist Xinbin Chen announces that a protein, RNPC1, appears to play a key role in the formation of lymphoma. The protein inhibits the p53 gene, a tumor-suppressing gene of animals and people. Chen has focused on p53's tumor-suppression qualities and how they may be thwarted by mutation and other events. Lymphoma, a blood cancer associated with overproduction of white blood cells, occurs spontaneously in dogs, representing 6 percent of all canine cancers. The disease is remarkably similar to lymphoma in humans.
  • Tilahun Yilma, the International Laboratory of Molecular Biology for Tropical Disease and an international team develop and successfully test two genetically modified Rift Valley fever vaccines that could be adapted for humans.
  • The school receives a $2.6 million award from the US Department of Agriculture to carry out research aimed at reducing the incidence of bovine respiratory disease. The leading cause of death in beef and dairy calves, bovine respiratory disease results in the loss of more than one million animals and $692 million each year. Dr. Terry Lehenbauer, director of the Veterinary Medicine Teaching and Research Center in Tulare, leads a project at a local calf ranch concerning the genetic components of disease resistance and other factors that influence risks in young Holstein calves prior to weaning. He also manages a case-control study to distinguish genetic differences in calves with and without symptoms caused by common viral and bacterial pathogens. Dr. Laurel Gershwin contributes expertise in immunology by working with seven different agents of bovine respiratory disease as part of the project. Efforts are redoubled in 2013 when Dr. Sharif Aly joins the project to advance risk assessment, welfare analysis and Extension education.
  • Michael D. Lairmore becomes the 8th dean of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, immediately leading the first comprehensive strategic planning effort to build mission-focused programs that further promote outstanding education for society-ready veterinarians, innovative research to advance clinical veterinary medicine and public health, and state-of-the-art patient care.

2010

  • The value of well-trained veterinary pathologists is evident in Linda Munson's lead authorship of "Elements of good training in anatomic pathology," a summary of the goals of professional pathologist training. A personal legacy, the Linda Munson Fellowship for Research in Wildlife Pathology supports advanced study of wildlife disease pathology. Munson's gift inspires colleagues, sponsors and training institutions to establish 29 new pathology training positions at 16 North American universities, supported by more than $6.8 million.
  • Working with cancer specialists at the UC San Francisco medical school, veterinary neurologist Peter Dickinson conducts treatment trials in dogs with naturally occurring brain tumors. The strategy combines surgery, chemotherapy and a specialized pump to deliver drugs directly to tumor sites inside the brain. The evaluation provides valuable data on treatment safety and effectiveness in humans.
  • The collaboration of large animal clinician Michael Lane with a practitioner on a large dairy farm addresses the health effects of inducing labor in cows past their due dates. Their findings indicate improved reproductive success after calving and impact recommendations for the standard of care of pregnant cows.
  • Veterinarian Stan Marks and a UC Davis physician collaborator perform a novel, laser-assisted surgery and correct a near-fatal swallowing disorder in a young dachshund. In 2013, the same team breaks further ground when the surgeons perform the first canine laryngectomy to save the life of a dog rescued from a shelter.
  • Dr. Susan M. Stover presents data indicating that synthetic racetrack surfaces have significant potential for reducing musculoskeletal injuries in Thoroughbred racehorses.
  • Drs. Sandra Newbury and Kate Hurley contribute to the first publication of "Standards of Care in Animal Shelters." Both are affiliates of the UC Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program.
  • Gary Marty, a veterinary pathologist and research associate who has studied the health of pink salmon since the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska, reviews 20 years of fish production data, compares them with 60 years of population counts of adult pink salmon and concludes that the main suspect of decline in wild pink salmon populations, sea lice from fish farms, has no significant effect on the productivity of the wild salmon population.

2000-2009

2009

  • Kimber L. Stanhope, Jean Marc Schwarz (co-first authors) and faculty endocrinologist Peter Havel learn how fructose-sweetened beverages can adversely affect metabolism in overweight people, increasing visceral fats and decreasing insulin sensitivity. The effects can cause medical conditions that increase susceptibility to heart attack and stroke. In another obesity study, Stanhope, Havel, faculty member Helen Raybould and others show for the first time that a surgical procedure in rats similar to bariatric surgery in humans causes biochemical changes that can delay the onset of type 2 diabetes. The researchers later show that a high-sugar diet raises levels of three known risk factors for heart disease: LDL cholesterol, triglycerides and a protein that can lead to plaque buildup in arteries.
  • The One Health Institute was founded to organize the school’s principal One Health activities, with Jonna Mazet as the founding director.
  • A USAID grant of $75 million to the Wildlife Health Center sponsors PREDICT, a program of global disease surveillance to prevent wildlife pathogens from spreading to humans, especially in disease "hot spots." The consortium quickly produces a web-based, open-access map to help governments and health agencies track emerging infectious diseases around the world.
  • The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory contributes to the completion of the sequencing of the equine genome begun by Ann T. Bowling and James Murray; the project's findings hold important implications for improved breeding and health of horses. One year later, researchers Alison L. Ruhe, Aaron Wong and Mark W. Neff contribute UC Davis expertise to the completed dog genome.
  • Linda Munson leads a decade-long multidisciplinary effort to determine causes of a catastrophic population decline in the Channel Island fox. The wildlife pathologist helps identify canine distemper—likely transmitted by raccoons—as the cause of a devastating epidemic. A vaccination program and related efforts help restore the fox population. Ongoing contributions include efforts to characterize certain tumors in the species, analyze fox genetics and perform overall health monitoring.
  • Using a specialized frame to position the head, digital imaging, computerized treatment plans and a linear accelerator, radiation oncologist Michael Kent begins treating patients with "stereotactic radiosurgery." The technique delivers high doses of radiation to precise tumor sites—an efficient and noninvasive alternative to surgery when tumors are located deep within the brain or close to vital brain areas.
  • One of the first individuals to recognize that heart disease is a major cause of mortality for all the great apes in captivity co-founds the Great Ape Heart Project. Pathologist Linda Lowenstine becomes instrumental to the school becoming the new home of the international Mountain Gorilla One Health program, now known as Gorilla Doctors.
  • The Health and Livelihood Improvement project examines the effects of zoonotic disease and water management on health and livelihoods in Tanzania; the project is the first of several One Health projects initiated at the school.

2006

  • The veterinary research budget expands by 44 percent to $96 million for studies of animal, human and environmental health.
  • Three National Institutes of Health grants totaling $5.7 million expand the Mouse Biology Program to develop and share genetically altered laboratory mice serving as models of animal and human disease. Resources and expertise of the Mutant Mouse Regional Resource Center and the Knock-Out Mouse Project support biomedical advances worldwide.
  • Geneticist James Murray's research in transgenic goats may lead to the production of milk with properties that can protect infants against diarrhea, which kills more than 2 million children around the world each year.
  • Instruction crosses a new threshold when Dean Bennie Osburn and the faculty dedicate Gladys Valley Hall, a classroom complex that accommodates large-scale lectures, classroom discussions, independent computer study, student volunteer activities and continuing education events. In 2007, the laboratory designed for clinical instruction of surgery, anesthesiology and radiology also opens; the Ira M. "Gary" Gourley Clinical Teaching Center honors the memory of the esteemed professor of small animal surgery.
  • Faculty members of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory, working with state and federal agencies, succeed in developing a single, rapid test to screen for foot-and-mouth disease and six "look-alike" diseases in livestock.
  • The American Veterinary Medical Association bestows its Animal Welfare Award to equine clinician John Madigan for his organization of large animal rescues and development of emergency response protocols during natural disasters involving animals.

2005

  • Carol Cardona of Veterinary Medicine Extension and Walter Boyce of the Wildlife Health Center join other infectious disease experts to inform the public and coordinate strategies to prevent an epidemic of avian influenza in the United States. Boyce heads a nationwide surveillance program focusing on wild birds of the Pacific Flyway, testing for the presence of infection that could be transmitted to domestic birds.
  • Bruce R. Charlton and the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory staff develop a PCR assay used extensively in California to screen for Salmonella enteritidis, which causes food-borne illness in humans.
  • Veterinary ophthalmologist Steven Hollingsworth performs the first ultrasound studies of the eyes of 12 client-owned snakes. The exams produces the first detailed data about the structure of healthy snake eyes. The exercise provides an exceptional learning experience for veterinary students and residents while moving the profession closer to the goal of improving medical care for snakes.
  • Veterinary cardiologists Mark Kittleson and Kristin MacDonald identify the genetic mutation responsible for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the most common heart disease of cats. The discovery marks the first observation that a spontaneous genetic mutation causes any type of heart disease in a cat or dog and the first report of a mutation related to the particular disease in a nonhuman species. The knowledge helps breeders prevent the problem, and it provides insights into the disease that caused the deaths of Reggie Lewis of the Boston Celtics' and Loyola Marymount University basketball player Hank Gathers.
  • A new, rapid diagnostic test developed in the Real-time PCR Research and Diagnostics Core Facility identifies canine influenza, an emerging infectious disease of special concern for shelters and kennels. The laboratory uses molecular detection methods to provide accurate diagnosis of animal or plant diseases and assist with research of the highest quality.
  • Kirsten Gilardi, leading the SeaDoc Society, cleans up lost and abandoned fishing gear along the California coast to reduce underwater hazards to fish and marine mammals, boats, divers and swimmers. Within six years, the program retrieves 60 tons of fishing nets, traps and pots. Working with communities to install recycling stations on public piers, the organization collects more than a million feet of fishing line. The program expands to the Pacific Northwest; Gilardi calculates that spending $1,358 on removal of one underwater net can save almost $20,000 worth of Dungeness crab over 10 years.

2004

  • The school launches the Students Training in Advanced Research program, STAR, which provides a funded opportunity for veterinary students to explore up to 10 weeks of in-depth research in established faculty laboratories. Selected students pursue their own research projects under the close mentorship of faculty, culminating in poster presentations to faculty, staff and students. Mentors nurture and inspire the scholarly careers of a number of students and enhance the appreciation of all students for the value of basic research.
  • Veterinary geneticist Leslie A. Lyons identifies the genetic mutation for polycystic kidney disease in Persian cats. She develops a DNA-based test and works in concert with breeders to eradicate this prevalent inherited disease in cats.
  • Equine veterinarian and PhD candidate Monica Aleman identifies the genetic roots of equine malignant hyperthermia, a life-threatening disorder that may develop during anesthesia. Aleman's diagnostic tests lead to better preventive strategies and insights about the condition in horses, other animals and humans.
  • The Center for Companion Animal Health opens its new $16 million facility, built entirely with private funds. The building's cancer center triples the capacity for cancer treatments and provides laboratories for genetics and cancer research.
  • Investigators from the Center for Comparative Medicine develop a sensitive PET scan in mice. The technology helps detect cancer cells at different disease stages and may lead to better evaluation of cancer-fighting drugs in people.
  • The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security receives $4.7 million from the Department of Homeland Security to train personnel how to prevent, recognize and deal with potential terrorist acts directed at the nation's food supply.

2003

  • James Case of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory plays a major role in a pilot program whose goal is to set national reporting standards of medical records, including reports of laboratory and other clinical observations. Case is instrumental in the design and development of the electronic data exchange processes for the National Animal Health Laboratory Network and serves as the veterinary expert on the Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine for the National Library of Medicine. The move improves coordination of patient information and data analysis. Universal standards assure that the most effective communication occurs, particularly during disease outbreaks when rapid response is critical.
  • Veterinary nutritionist Andrea J. Fascetti unveils the Nutrition Support Center to meet dogs' and cats' exacting dietary needs, manage or prevent disease related to diet, and contribute to successful management of clinical cases at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.
  • Veterinarian Holly Ernest uses genetic analysis to explain that mountain lion populations in different geographic regions of the state possess distinct genetic structures; results help officials anticipate migration patterns and manage wildlife corridors.
  • The Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital establishes the first veterinary pharmacy residency to familiarize pharmacists with unique aspects of veterinary clinical pharmacy and veterinary pharmaceutical research; the program's first resident becomes the head of the pharmacy service in the school's UC Veterinary Medical Center—San Diego and in turn mentors pharmacists interested in this exceptional field.

2002

  • Dr. Fern Tablin, veterinarian and cell biologist, plays a pivotal role on the team that deciphers for the first time the activation process of blood platelets and develops more reliable storage methods for human blood products.
  • To prepare future faculty members and fill a growing need in the workforce, the school launches the Veterinary Scientist Training Program, providing four students with financial support for up to seven years and a flexible course of study so that they can pursue Doctor of Veterinary Medicine and Doctor of Philosophy degree training.
  • The school and the School of Medicine introduce the Master of Public Health degree program. Veterinarians with the degree pursue careers in food safety, zoonotic disease and other aspects of veterinary public health. Veterinary faculty including Philip H. Kass and Thomas Farver, whose technical skills form the underpinnings of successfully designed clinical and basic science studies, lead course work in epidemiology and medical statistics.
  • Alan Conley is named a Chancellor's Fellow for his "early career accomplishments and potential to influence fellow researchers." Conley's reproductive research in different species at the earliest stages of development delivers abundant insights into gender differentiation, the nature and regulation of sex hormones, and the improvement of reproductive function.
  • Wildlife veterinarian Melissa Miller and parasitologist Patricia A. Conrad pinpoint Toxoplasma gondii and Sarcocystis neurona as important causes of fatal brain infections in California's endangered Southern sea otters. Cats are the only animals known to shed oocysts, the tough, environmentally resistant eggs of the single-celled Toxoplasma parasites, which may move to the marine environment via freshwater runoff. Toxoplasmosis presents a danger to pregnant women and individuals with compromised immune systems.
  • The Western Institute for Food Safety and Security unites academia, government and industry in a focused research effort encompassing plant- and animal-related food safety and security at every stage of the food production continuum.
  • The emergency preparedness and molecular diagnostics of the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory help federal and state agencies bring an outbreak of Exotic Newcastle disease in poultry under control. In partnership with the California Department of Food and Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine Extension, laboratory faculty including Alex Ardans, Sharon Hietala and others combine an emergency response plan, strict quarantines and rapid elimination of birds with an in-depth surveillance program. Peter Woolcock develops the virus isolation protocol while the laboratory provides round-the-clock service and helps develop a DNA-based test that improves accuracy while drastically reducing the wait time for test results. James Case's informatics role speeds communication of case reports and diagnostic results to halt the epidemic. Veterinary Medicine Extension specialist Carol Cardona conducts outreach and builds trust among backyard breeders to help rein in the spread of disease. Working intensively on this complex challenge, the partners contain the outbreak two years sooner than expected, saving poultry producers more than $500 million.
  • The American Veterinary Medical Association bestows its Animal Welfare Award to wildlife medicine expert Dr. Murray Fowler for his ongoing dedication to the health of exotic animals such as camels, zoo species, llamas and alpacas.
  • The Shelter Medicine Program group confirms a rare, often fatal, calicivirus outbreak in Southern California cats and works with practitioners to contain the disease within several weeks.

2001

  • A team led by John Madigan explains the life cycle of Neorickettsia risticii, the agent of Potomac horse fever, which offers evidence that freshwater snails and flukes (larvae) help transmit the disease. The research debunks a long-held theory that the disease is spread by ticks. The new knowledge leads to more effective measures to prevent the disease and the associated risk of potentially fatal cases of laminitis.
  • To nurture food animal medicine careers and promote food safety awareness with intensive practical training, Bradford P. Smith organizes the Early Veterinary Student Bovine Experience Program, offering several weeks of in-depth experience with producers in California's unique dairy industry and veterinary practitioners in the field.
  • Neurotoxicologist Isaac N. Pessah agrees to head the Center for Children's Environmental Health, funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, to study for the first time possible links between pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls or heavy metals and the development of autism. Pessah's veterinary study links thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, with immune dysfunction in mice. In a large population-based study, center researchers report that typically developing children and children with autism have similar levels of mercury in their blood streams.
  • Irva Hertz-Picciotto, et al. show how polychlorinated biphenyls alter normal patterns of developing brain cells; findings may explain associations between exposures to PCB's and behavioral deficits. The impairment is a common feature of a number of conditions, including autism spectrum disorders.
  • Cecilia Giulivi reports that autistic children are far more likely to have deficits in their ability to produce cellular energy from their mitochondrial DNA, which directly affects brain function, than are typically developing children. Her further studies in mice show that abnormal action of a single gene disrupts energy use in neurons. The harmful changes are coupled with antisocial and prolonged repetitive behavior—traits found in autism.
  • Pessah and fellow researchers find strong evidence that triclosan, an antibacterial chemical widely used in hand soaps and other personal-care products, is of concern to both human and environmental health; the experiments reveal changes in muscle function.
  • The annual research budget reaches $61 million, with 54% of funding dedicated to human and environmental health issues.

2000

  • The multidisciplinary team of veterinary immunologist Laurel Gershwin, pulmonary pathologists Dallas Hyde and Charles Plopper, physiologist Ed Schelegle, and human pediatrician Jesse Joad, develop the first monkey model of human asthma. The model demonstrates for the first time that occasional exposure to dust mites and the air pollutant ozone can change how the lungs of young rhesus monkeys develop—then lead to a disease similar to childhood asthma in humans.
  • The SeaDoc Society begins environmental studies and scientific liaison work in the Salish Sea, Puget Sound and other inland waters of the Pacific Northwest. Among its first resources are maps of the floor of Puget Sound that aid in analysis of marine populations.
  • Veterinary pathologist Linda Lowenstine and a group of marine mammal scientists identify domoic acid poisoning as the cause of death in more than one hundred California coast sea lions; the neurotoxin was produced during three episodes of algal bloom between 1998 and 2000.
  • The world's first Shelter Medicine Program dedicates research, education and services to animal shelters to improve the health and adoptability of homeless pets; the school also runs the only shelter medicine residency in the nation.
  • A study co-authored by Linda Lowenstine supports the hypothesis that the presence of a novel gamma herpes virus is a factor in the development of urogenital cancers in California sea lions. The researchers show that herpes viruses and chemicals, such as the millions of pounds of DDTs and PCBs dumped into the ocean by manufacturing companies between the 1940s and the early 1970s, may interact to trigger tumors, possibly by suppressing the immune system or influencing hormone balance.
  • The first formal veterinary information model, designed by James T. Case, improves the coordination of medical record-keeping among public health professionals by including animal-related data, environmental samples and food safety samples.
  • Sharon Hietala and Mark Thurmond develop pooling methods as a low-cost strategy to screen for rare but persistent diseases such as bovine viral diarrhea virus. This approach improves diagnosis at significantly reduced cost to producers. The program, run at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory, also fosters large-scale surveillance of diseases previously too cost-prohibitive to manage routinely.
  • Linda Munson's passion for training and certification of veterinary pathologists, particularly in wildlife pathology and medicine, profoundly influences a generation of veterinary pathologists around the world. As head of the hospital's pathology service and the residency program in anatomic pathology, Munson incorporates intensive training into a service known for diagnostics of the highest quality. Munson's initiatives, including a successful push for financial support for graduate students, bring attention to the evolving role of pathologists in wildlife health.

1990-1999

1999

  • Environmental toxicologist Bill Lasley and a team of reproductive experts discover that dioxin exposure may cause early fetal loss in the nonhuman primate, a reproductive model for humans. The scientists also demonstrate the value of endocrine biomarkers in identifying a toxic exposure to primate pregnancy before direct signs of reproductive toxicity appear.
  • Veterinary neurologist Richard LeCouteur and pathologist William Vernau, with radiologists Philip Koblik and Robert Higgins, demonstrate the first CT-guided, stereotactic brain biopsies, a novel way to diagnose canine brain tumors accurately and safely.
  • To assure the integrity of the Thoroughbred racing industry, protect animal welfare and learn more about how medications affect equine health, the Kenneth L. Maddy Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory opens. Laboratory personnel perform required drug testing on roughly 36,000 samples each year from equine athletes. The laboratory develops new tests and carries out research in equine pharmacology.
  • The Institute of Medicine inducts Frederick A. Murphy, the school's dean 1991-1996 and professor of virology, for his career contributions in zoonotic viral disease. He is the sole veterinarian of 55 individuals elected. Following Murphy's achievement, the organization adds veterinary expertise to its ranks when Stephen W. Barthold, Patricia A. Conrad, and Jonna A.K. Mazet join the prestigious and active body, and Michael D. Lairmore carries the same distinction when he arrives as dean.
  • Veterinary epidemiologists aid decision makers in Taiwan to deal with a serious outbreak of foot and mouth disease in swine. Timothy Carpenter and Mark Thurmond, founders of the Center for Animal Disease Modeling and Surveillance, develop surveillance systems for the detection, prevention and eradication of animal diseases and their associated economic impacts. They employ spatial epidemiology, epidemiologic modeling and health and ecologic risk analysis. The program becomes integral to national planning for possible incursion of foot and mouth disease in the US, avian influenza in poultry, abortion storms in cattle, anaplasmosis, brucellosis in wildlife and plague.
  • Queen Margrethe II of Denmark confers knighthood on Hans P. Riemann for his decades of service in microbiology, food safety and veterinary epidemiology in Denmark and the United States. Riemann develops the first course work on food-borne disease at the school and is instrumental in the establishment of veterinary epidemiology in Scandinavia.

1998

  • Laurel Gershwin leads the team to reproduce the vaccine-induced disease enhancement that occurred in children vaccinated with a formalin-inactivated respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine. Development of the bovine RSV as a model of RSV enhanced disease provides evidence to inform testing of future RSV vaccines.
  • Veterinary microbiologists and pathologists describe papillomatous digital dermatitis, or hairy footwarts, which emerged in California during the early 1990s, as a distinct and economically important disease of cattle. Faculty veterinarians determine that spirochetes play an important role and develop antimicrobial treatments.
  • The incoming class expands from 108 to 122 students and includes 97 women—a record 80 percent of the year’s enrollment.
  • The University of California Veterinary Medical Center—San Diego expands the school's clinical services and research collaborations into Southern California. By 2008, the center is offering specialized services in pharmacy, nutrition, cardiology and renal medicine. Kidney hemodialysis is available when time is of the essence to treat acute kidney failure, especially in cases of anti-freeze poisoning.
  • The school celebrates the 50th anniversary of its mission of teaching, research and service excellence to benefit animal, human and environmental health.
  • The AVMA Council on Education judges that aging facilities are inadequate for the school's mission. Limited accreditation status sparks a period of intense fundraising and construction of several state-of-the-art teaching, research and clinical facilities that transform the medical sciences complex into a modern veterinary campus. The Wayne and Gladys Valley Foundation provides $10.7 million—the largest gift in campus history at the time—for a $354 million long-range facilities plan and construction of new infrastructure.
  • The Center for Comparative Medicine, a joint program with the School of Medicine, opens, launching advanced biomedical research on persistent diseases shared by animals and humans such as AIDS, influenza and Lyme disease.
  • Veterinary parasitologist Walter M. Boyce and Jonna A.K. Mazet, a veterinary epidemiologist become co-directors of the Wildlife Health Center. The two propagate numerous programs in California and abroad dealing with a host of wildlife species, diseases affecting animals and people, and habitat issues. In 2006, the organization and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife craft the California Wildlife Action Plan to identify critical needs regarding problems of greatest conservation concern and determine actions needed to protect California's wildlife.
  • The school launches a $50 million campaign, its most ambitious development effort to date.
  • Fish pathologist Ronald P. Hedrick, an expert on whirling disease in trout and salmon, discovers a new, fatal herpes virus believed responsible for the deaths of several show-quality ornamental koi being judged at a New York event. Hobbyists from Europe, Asia and the U.S. may have taken the virus home and infected other animals. As ornamental koi rise in popularity and price (up to $10,000), the spread of disease presents international challenges for hobbyists regarding transport, ideal water temperatures and judging methods at shows.
  • The Mercer Veterinary Clinic for the Homeless receives the Humane Award from the American Veterinary Medical Association.
  • The JD Wheat Veterinary Orthopedic Research Laboratory is endowed. The program advances diagnosis and prevention of catastrophic injuries to improve equine health and welfare.

1997

  • The school and the California Veterinary Medical Association create the Donald G. Low/CVMA Practitioner Fellowship. The unique program supports practicing veterinarians for four weeks of up-to-date clinical training and professional exchange in the teaching hospital. Donald J. Klingborg is instrumental in establishing the program, which reflects Low's passion for the ongoing education of veterinarians.
  • The California Department of Fish and Game signs a memorandum of understanding to assign oversight of the Oiled Wildlife Care Network to faculty based at the School of Veterinary Medicine. With Jonna A.K. Mazet's leadership, the network becomes an international model for rehabilitation, research and education. The statewide coalition of agencies, academic institutions and wildlife organizations forms the largest such program in the world. Faculty and trained rescue personnel rescue, treat and rehabilitate sea birds and other wildlife affected by oil spills along California's 1,100-mile coast. By 2015, network personnel have responded to 75 oil spill events and cared for nearly 8,000 animals. Under the direction of wildlife veterinarian Michael H. Ziccardi, the network serves in an essential role in the aftermath of the 2007 Cosco Busan spill in San Francisco Bay and the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon explosion. The academic research increases understanding of the consequences of oil exposure and improves response technology.
  • John Madigan, Professor of Equine Medicine, formed the first UC Davis Veterinary Emergency Response Team, a Medical Reserve Corporation, under the Office of the Surgeon General. 

1996

  • Bennie I. Osburn, becomes dean, and goes on to serve three terms. His commitments to research, food animal health-food safety and enthusiasm for the broad role of veterinary medicine become a guiding force for centers and new programs. His leadership, despite tough financial times for higher education, leads to the $354 million long-range facilities plan, major development initiatives and construction of five major buildings to provide for students, researchers, clinicians and clients of the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital.
  • Veterinary geneticists Marcia Eggleston, et al. receive a request from Scotland Yard to determine the source of a mysterious blood sample found after a man is fatally stabbed. The experts provide evidence linking a dog that was on the scene to the main suspect, which helps crack the case. The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, directed by Dr. Ann Bowling, expands its services to identify animals that are present when a crime occurs, stolen or mistreated. The work of Dr. Beth Wictum, who manages a national canine database, has enabled law enforcement to identify animals used in fighting and trace them to their owners for prosecution.
  • Organized by Donald G. Low and Donald Klingborg, the school publishes the Book of Horses, a faculty-written popular guide to all aspects of equine health.
  • The research budget grows to $46 million, a significant portion of it from private funding.
  • The school receives a bequest valued at $5.6 million from the estate of Theodora Peigh for student scholarships. By the time the land is sold in 2005 the proceeds realized amount to $13 million. Since the original gift, more than 650 students have received financial support from this donation alone.
  • The school becomes home to the Center for Vectorborne Disease, a unit that brings together veterinary experts and medical entomologists to study all aspects of diseases transmitted by vectors such as mosquitos, ticks and rodents. Faculty in this group, along with diagnosticians at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory, identify the West Nile virus as it enters California for the first time in 2003 after testing 11,000 mosquito pools, 2,000 dead birds and serum from 5,000 wild birds.
  • Challenges surrounding animal rescue efforts during devastating floods in Northern California spotlight the critical need to incorporate organized animal rescue methods into emergency response planning. Dr. John Madigan, other faculty members, staff and volunteer students labor for more than a decade with statewide agencies to build a veterinary disaster response program based on the Standardized Emergency Management System. The Veterinary Emergency Response Team (VERT) effects several high-profile rescue operations; protocols developed by Madigan, et al. to airlift stranded livestock to safety by helicopter are adopted nationwide.

1995

  • A team of faculty members organized by Donald Low publishes the UC Davis Book of Dogs: The Complete Medical Reference Guide for Dogs and Puppies to inform lay readers about canine health.
  • Bone pathologist Roy Pool's evaluation and classification of more than 2,000 bone and joint tumors of dogs and cats forms the basis for the World Health Organization’s "Histological Classification of Bone and Joint Tumors of Domestic Animals."
  • Philip Koblik and William Hornof describe a scintigraphy technique that becomes the norm for evaluation of patients with possible portosystemic shunts. The diagnostic tool, as well as new techniques for minimally invasive surgery, helps small animal surgeons correct portosystemic shunts. Hornof, Koblik and other imaging specialists introduce magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography and other modern imaging tools to the veterinary setting throughout the 1980s and 1990s.
  • Food animal clinicians construct a flotation tank for “downer” cows. The veterinarians offer critical support, closely monitor recovery and save lives in previously hopeless cases.
  • Zoonotic disease expert Bruno Chomel describes the epidemiology of cat scratch disease, proposes a link between fleas and hosts, and explores myriad aspects of Bartonella species in domestic and wild animals. Bartonella infections pose serious health risks in older and immunocompromised people.

1994

  • Patricia Conrad, professor of parasitology, works with physicians and public health experts to cultivate and characterize a protozoan similar to but distinct from Babesia microti, a human pathogen recognized in patients in the western US. The team later characterizes the pathogen as Babesia duncani, a new species of tick-transmitted blood parasite. The scientists' methodology improves diagnosis and identification of human protozoal pathogens—and influences protocols for safer human blood transfusions.
  • John Madigan, Professor of Equine Medicine, started the Lucy Whittier - UC Davis TaqMan Core Molecular Lab, providing molecular diagnostics for researchers and the VMTH. 

1993

  • Collaborators Antoinette Marsh, Bradd Barr, Andrea Packham and Patricia Conrad identify Neospora hughesii as a species distinct from Neospora caninum. The description of its pathogenesis by Barr, Conrad, Joan Rowe, Karen Sverlow, Robert BonDurant, Alex Ardans, and Michael Oliver improves diagnosis of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis, one of the most important causes of neurologic disease in horses in the US.

1992

  • The laboratory of Robert McKernon Joy provides the first direct demonstration that chlorinated hydrocarbons act as GABA antagonists in vivo as well as in vitro, disrupting the major neurotransmitters in the central nervous system.
  • With the advent of molecular genetic analysis, the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory makes strides in identifying disease traits in animals. Veterinary geneticists describe hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HYPP) in horses, discover the gene responsible and develop the first DNA test to identify carriers of the condition. Horse owners incorporate the tool into their breeding programs to prevent the neuromuscular disease problem in future generations. Since then, faculty and staff have developed tests to screen for severe combined immunodeficiency, overo lethal white foal disease, junctional epidermolysis bullosa and glycogen branching enzyme disease in horses.
  • The Michael R. Floyd Veterinary Dental Operatory Suite opens in the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, bringing state-of-the-art dental care to pets and providing greater hands-on clinical experience for students. Leigh Hyde-West pioneers dental procedures for patients of the Small Animal Clinic.
  • The Center for Companion Animal Health (CCAH) is founded to improve the health of companion animals by encouraging and supporting academic studies and clinical research into diseases affecting dogs, cats and other small pets.

1991

  • Frederick A. Murphy becomes the sixth dean at one of the most difficult times in the school’s history. Between 1991 and 1993 the school loses $2.5 million in state appropriations, drops its entering class size from 122 to 108, and loses 15 faculty positions. Additional retirements during these years reduce the size of the faculty by more than 25 percent.
  • Drs. John Madigan, Johanna Watson, and Peter Heidmann find novel techniques to prevent Rhodococcus equi from causing severe pneumonia in foals. Transfusions of equine hyperimmune plasma reduce the number of cases, though not all. The hospital team also combines macrolide antibiotics with rifampin to improve outcomes of clinically affected individuals.
  • In response to severe budget cuts, the faculty reorganizes its administrative structures in the Dean’s Office and academic departments, reducing the number of departments from eleven to six and combining administrative functions.
  • After analyzing aborted cattle fetuses over a period of four and a half years, a faculty team including Mark Anderson, Patricia Blanchard, Brad C. Barr, JP Dubey and RL Hoffman at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory, working with parasitologist Patricia Conrad, concludes that a Neospora-like, cyst-forming, coccidian is a major cause of abortion in California dairy cattle. The diagnostic thoroughness of laboratory personnel and research faculty provides new information for diagnosticians, practicing veterinarians and agricultural producers.

1990

  • The California Horse Racing Board orders statewide post-mortem examinations of racehorses that die at the track to take place at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory. Drs. Susan Stover, Roy Pool, J.D. Wheat, Timothy O'Brien, Dennis Meagher and others tackle the trailblazing racetrack breakdown study that characterizes catastrophic Thoroughbred injuries. In less than five years, these experts:
    • Discover that stress fractures precipitate catastrophic fractures
    • Discover new sites, now routinely examined, for stress fractures
    • Advocate bone scan (scintigraphy) installation at Santa Anita Racetrack
    • Develop new bone scan views to enhance detection of stress fractures
    • Associate high-intensity exercise with increased risk for skeletal injury
    • Determine that high-intensity exercise increases risk for layup
    • Determine that layup increases risk for catastrophic humeral fracture
    • Associate horseshoe toe grabs with increased risk for injury, especially suspensory apparatus failure (fetlock breakdown)
    • Discover osteoarthritis in the backs and pelvises of over 25% of racehorses that die for other reasons
    • Improve techniques for sampling and treating the fetlock and pastern joints
    • Recommend better training methods to protect the health and welfare of racehorses
    • Improve methods for fracture repair (tibia, pastern)
    • Improve understanding of joint cartilage inflammation and function
  • Dr. Larry Cowgill heads up the first veterinary hemodialysis unit, which eventually conducts as many as 1,000 treatments per year as the world's largest program in renal medicine.
  • Students establish the Mercer Veterinary Clinic for the Homeless. Volunteer faculty and community veterinarians provide basic care and food for the animals of homeless clients one Saturday a month in Sacramento and arrange referrals for spay-neuter and other procedures. The clinic provides valuable opportunities for the students to learn more about high quality medicine, practice management, budgeting, client relationships and technical skills.
  • Continuing the tradition of excellence begun by Clyde Stormont in the 1950s, the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory pioneers DNA-based animal parentage verification. Using microsatellite DNA markers, the organization becomes the first animal parentage laboratory to offer DNA testing on horses, cattle and camelids such as llamas and alpacas. Led by equine geneticist Dr. Ann T. Bowling, laboratory personnel develop DNA-based tests for elk, deer, dogs, cats, sheep, goats and primates, generating more than two million DNA profiles. Bowling serves as the authority for breeders regarding chromosome structure, coat color traits, horse evolution and the familial connections among different horse breeds.
  • George Cardinet introduces the routine use of the computer in the professional curriculum. School-supplied hardware and specialized software programs provide unique, interactive curriculum modules and syllabi that enhance delivery of information and allow for flexible approaches for independent study.
  • Edward R. "Rob" Atwill's characterization of the protozoan parasite Cryptosporidium parvum becomes a model for environmental studies of disease organisms that may affect animals and humans. His research program, incorporating epidemiological models and modern diagnostic testing methods to assess potential health risks, is noted for its collaboration and practical insights.
  • Alan R. Buckpitt, examining the lung toxicology of naphthalene and other chemicals on the lung, contributes a new perspective on how varying responses occur to therapeutic drugs or toxic compounds. His approach takes into consideration the species, individual respiratory systems and different cell types within the lung. Naphthalene is a component of cigarette smoke, car exhaust and smoke from forest fires as well as being an ingredient in mothballs.

1980-1989

1989

  • After years of research in and observation of many breeds of dogs, veterinary orthopedist Alida Wind grows convinced that canine elbow arthrosis results from various dysplasias of the elbow joint. With the aid of clients Barbara and Martin Packard, Wind organizes the first international conference on elbow dysplasia; and the group of orthopedists, radiologists and geneticists establishes the first protocols for the evaluation and diagnosis of the condition.
  • Veterinary scientists based at the California National Primate Research Center are the first to isolate and describe the simian immunodeficiency virus and explore complex comparative studies to promote therapies for AIDS.
  • The nation's first Pet Loss Support Hotline becomes a national resource for people grieving due to the loss of a pet and an opportunity for veterinary students to gain training and firsthand experience in effective and compassionate communication with pet owners.

1988

  • The California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System, the state's veterinary diagnostic laboratory, opens on the UC Davis campus with a faculty dedicated to clinical diagnosis of animal disease. The public service program succeeds in partnership with the California Department of Food and Agriculture to safeguard the health of California’s livestock and poultry industries and protect the public health from animal disease.
  • Timothy O'Brien, Roy Pool, Dennis Meagher and John D Wheat start a formal program to address orthopedic injuries in racehorses. Endowed as the JD Wheat Veterinary Orthopedic Research Laboratory in 1998, the program advances diagnosis and prevention of catastrophic injuries to improve equine health and welfare. O’Brien's innovations in diagnostic imaging with large animals bring the school international attention for the radiologic characterization of bone and joint problems of horses.
  • Tilahun Yilma publishes "Protection of cattle against rinderpest with infectious vaccinia virus recombinants expressing the HA or F gene." The veterinary virologist also develops a diagnostic test that is practical to use in the field. Rinderpest is a serious disease of cattle, especially in Africa.

1987

  • Ira “Gary” Gourley performs the first successful feline kidney transplant, leading the next generation of veterinary surgeons to develop the school's renowned kidney transplant program and build its reputation for small animal surgery. The school's training program prepares veterinary surgeons to establish several successful transplant programs across the country.
  • Despite a disturbing arson event during construction, the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory opens in partnership with the California Department of Food and Agriculture. Faculty revitalize California's animal diagnostic laboratories by successfully merging research into service to benefit livestock, poultry, horses and public health. Laboratory personnel carry modern molecular biology into daily use. Conducting nearly 2 million distinct analyses each year, personnel achieve rapid, accurate results and discover pathogens undetectable by conventional methods. The innovations in veterinary pathology, immunology, microbiology, analytical chemistry, toxicology and other disciplines influence quality assurance programs throughout the nation and bring the laboratory recognition and new responsibilities as a key resource for national networks. The laboratory's specimens and other data contribute to teaching as well as research; faculty consult on difficult diagnostic problems, thus providing greater value to producers.
  • Comparative virology studies of immunodeficiency in cats leads to the first description of feline immunodeficiency virus and a veterinary model that provides early insights about AIDS in humans. Niels Pedersen, Gordon Theilen and colleagues also explore modes of transmission and improve understanding of feline leukemia, feline infectious peritonitis and other viral syndromes. In 2002, the first federally approved vaccine for FIV is based on the team's research.
  • Veterinary cardiologists Mark Kittleson and Paul Pion and nutrition experts Quinton Rogers and James Morris uncover the link between feline dilated cardiomyopathy, a grave heart ailment, and a dietary deficiency of the amino acid taurine. Adding taurine to commercial cat foods reverses the problem and saves thousands of pets' lives. The fruitful Rogers-Morris collaboration results in multiple initial descriptions of essential amino acids in the feline diet and how nutrition affects the health of cats.

1986

  • The Aquatic Health Program directed by David E. Hinton begins a water quality testing service and research on behalf of statewide environmental agencies. Researchers (and future directors) Inge Werner, Swee Teh and a host of technicians participate in dozens of watershed monitoring projects large and small throughout California, including long-range studies such as the DeltaKeeper Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Project and the Sacramento River Watershed Project as well as targeted testing in the Tuolumne River, San Diego Creek, Cache Creek and other waterways. The laboratory analyzes water from multiple sources such as storm runoff and orchard runoff after pesticide applications to determine how different chemicals affect water quality and animal health.

1985

  • Edward Rhode, veterinary cardiologist/dean emeritus, and imaging specialist William Hornof develop first-pass cardiac imaging of horses using scintigraphy, with emphasis on normal cardiac systolic and diastolic indices. This advance in veterinary cardiology marks the early use of nuclear medicine and alternate imaging in veterinary radiology. Rhode is the first to establish cardiology as a distinct veterinary discipline.
  • Women DVM graduates outnumber men for the first time.
  • Dr. Robert Bondurant, large animal veterinarian, pioneers greater understanding of diseases affecting cattle breeding with long-term laboratory investigations and field research on trichomoniasis, which causes abortions and infertility in cattle. He perfects an assay that provides greater precision and speed of test results while eliminating false positives and reducing the cost to producers. Annual losses to the US beef industry from this disease can amount to hundreds of millions of dollars. Bondurant also collaborates with the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences to establish the bovine embryo transfer program in support of cattle breede

1984

  • Calvin Schwabe, in his book Veterinary Medicine and Human Health, defines the term "One Medicine," now widely referred to as "One Health." Schwabe, Margaret Meyer and others in the school advocate the integration of veterinary medicine with human and environmental health. Their leadership in epidemiology includes early development of the Master of Preventive Veterinary Medicine degree program for veterinarians.
  • The laboratory of Bradford Smith collaborates with Stanford University to develop a modified live, genetically altered Salmonella dublin vaccine for calves, licensed in the United States and available to veterinarians around the world. The faculty member dedicates himself for the next 25 years to investigations of Salmonella and methods for detection, control and prevention. Smith and colleagues describe how Salmonella enters, moves and persists in a cattle herd using antibody tests developed in a specialized laboratory. Smith serves as director of the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital from 1994 until his retirement in 2007.
  • Dr. Peter Moore, anatomic pathologist, publishes "Systemic Histiocytosis of Bernese Mountain Dog." Moore pioneers investigations and diagnostics of immune system neoplasia, or abnormal cell growth, in dogs and cats. He becomes instrumental to the development of new treatment recommendations for canine lymphoma, leukemia and histiocytic neoplasia. Histiocytic diseases, which include immuno-regulatory disorders and cancer, are most common in Bernese Mountain Dogs, Rottweilers, Flat Coated Retrievers and Golden Retrievers. As the century turns, Moore directs his expertise to the study of leukocyte antigen biology and spontaneous leukocytic diseases of companion animals.
  • John Madigan, Professor of Equine Medicine, launched the state of California’s first Equine Neonatal Critical Care unit at the VMTH, in collaboration with colleagues at SacMed.

1983

  • The Veterinary Medical Teaching and Research Center opens in Tulare, meeting the research and clinical needs of producers in the heart of California's dairy industry, the most productive in the nation. The facility emphasizes applied studies, herd health, productivity and environmental stewardship in production agriculture.

1982

  • James Cullor and colleague Brad Fenwick, pursue the groundbreaking work on the J5 core antigen concept in swine and dairy cattle under the mentorship of Bennie Osburn. More than three decades later, the J5 core antigen vaccine they developed has been studied in horses, beef cattle, dairy cattle, sheep, goats, llamas, mice, rabbits and aquaculture. It has been shown to be effective in reducing the incidence and severity of Gram-negative bacterial respiratory disease, mastitis, reproduction issues and gastrointestinal diseases. The J5 vaccine saves dairy producers millions of dollars each year by improving animal health, public health, food safety and food security. It is the most widely copied and marketed food animal vaccine to come out of UC Davis.
  • Edward A. Rhode assumes the duties of dean; he oversees expansion of teaching and research activities as well as construction of facilities, including the Veterinary Medicine Teaching and Research Center strategically located off-site in Tulare.
  • Randall F. Pritchett initiates the graduate course in molecular biology of animal viruses, paving the way for future scientists to answer basic, important questions about transcription, regulation of genomic expression and other topics just beginning to be explored in the field.

1981

Equine surgeons John Pascoe and Gregory Ferraro publish the single most important insight into the nature of a nearly ubiquitous disorder in heavily exercising racehorses described in veterinary textbooks since 1600. They demonstrate that the disorder, which Pascoe names exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage, originates in the lungs and not in the nose, as had been believed for centuries.


1980

  • J.W. Osebold, his doctoral student Laurel Gershwin, and Y.C. Zee publish the first evidence that inhaled ozone enhances allergic lung sensitization to allergens based on a rodent model. The discovery provides the framework for developing a monkey model of human asthma decades later.
  • Randall Pritchett's productive research into the molecular virology of herpes viruses leads to a major National Institutes of Health study, published in 1980, of the genetics among human cytomegaloviruses. The pathogen may be the most significant infectious cause of birth defects in industrialized countries.
  • Small animal orthopedists develop the first total hip prosthesis for dogs.
  • After being a partner with campus avian scientists since 1972, the school takes the California Raptor Center "under its wing," establishing a home for the rehabilitation of injured, ill and orphaned birds of prey. The program provides hands-on training to veterinary students and others in the care and management of birds of prey. Open to the public since 1993, the raptor center facilitates veterinary treatment, care of recovering birds and outreach to school groups and other members of the public. Of the 300-350 sick, injured, and orphaned raptors that come to the center each year, faculty, staff and volunteers successfully return about 60% to the wild.
  • US News and World Report names UC Davis the top veterinary school in the nation.
  • Clinicians pioneer methods and strategies for veterinary critical care medicine, including customized airway management, advanced fluid therapy, intravenous catheter care protocols and CPR standards.
  • Donald G. Low—a clinician who produces fundamental concepts in the field of kidney disease—facilitates a formal partnership with the California Veterinary Medical Association to provide continuing veterinary education courses and joint conferences; William Winchester directs the school's meetings for Southern California veterinarians at UC Irvine. The program builds to include notable international meetings on eye health, dermatology and other veterinary topics.
  • The school launches the development program to provide current-use funds and build endowments for scholarships and other programs.
  • Dr. Gerald Ling publishes numerous studies and develops techniques valuable in the diagnosis and treatment of urinary tract infections, particularly in small animals. Ling's activities help establish the emergency and outpatient services for small animals at the teaching hospital. His expert analysis of urinary tract stones leads to the development of the specialized laboratory that bears his name. With his significant collaboration, veterinary geneticist colleagues identify the gene responsible for overproduction of urea in Dalmatian dogs.
  • Bill Lasley’s comparisons of primate and human reproductive endocrinology advance the primate model of human reproduction. Lasley designs, builds and validates tests to quantify the effects of toxicant exposures, stress and disease on fertility in humans. The studies establish bioactivity and immunoactivity indices as prospective markers of exposure and reproductive loss. The novel assays facilitate non-invasive monitoring of reproductive function in many species.

 

1970-1979

1979

  • Veterinary Medicine II opens, providing enough faculty space for the school to expand class size to 128.
  • Hanspeter Witschi and Wanda Haschek pose a hypothesis about the cause of pulmonary fibrosis in people, noting that in their experiments "a lack of alveolar epithelial repair was the key event that led to a fibrotic response." The explanation that pulmonary fibrosis results from injury rather than inflammation is revisited after 2000 when medical professionals realize that anti-inflammatory therapies are ineffective. Witchi's decades of pulmonary toxicology experiments advance society's knowledge about the effects of air pollution and tobacco smoke on human lungs; acute and long-term lung injury; carcinogenesis; and risk assessment.

1977

  • Livio Raggi publishes his discovery of a minute infectious agent that coexists with the infectious bronchitis virus in poultry.
  • Eugene Steffey's publications on the effects of anesthesia in animals provide the foundation for successful inhalational anesthesia in veterinary medicine. The contributions of his team result in safer, effective management of critical surgical patients and save the lives of thousands of horses undergoing surgery.

1976

  • Stuart Anderson Peoples publishes a document for the Environmental Protection Agency, "Uptake, excretion and physiological effects of hexachlorobenzene in lambs," an example of his early environmental health studies on the effects of arsenicals, DDT and other compounds. Peoples develops analytical techniques and detailed investigations of the pharmacokinetics of several agricultural pesticides. Peoples, a member of the founding faculty, serves as first chair of the Department of Physiological Sciences and participates actively in the development of academic programs of the school.

1975

  • The publication of "The relation of infection to infertility in the mare and stallion" co-authored by John Hughes encapsulates the leadership and insights of trailblazers in the 1960s and 1970s who define normal reproductive health in horses, help explain how infection and other factors affect fertility in mares and stallions, and address other equine reproductive disorders. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Hughes, George Stabenfeldt and other members of this dynamic team contribute extensive knowledge that affects breeding strategies for horse owners. Stabenfeldt's publications include more than 200 articles as well as chapters in several popular textbooks.
  • Livio Raggi develops the school's first teaching and research program in aquatic animal medicine, initiating research and courses on diseases of fish and shellfish.
  • When only six cases of Erlichiosis in horses had been reported worldwide, John Madigan and a team of equine veterinarians were the first to identify the agent called Ehrlichia equi. Madigan’s team then publishes 41 cases in 1981 caused by the pathogen, now known as Anaplasma phagocytophilum.
  • The Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital initiates the nation's first Animal Behavior Service.
  • Jiri "Jerry" Kaneko begins unraveling mysteries of bovine lymphocyctic leukemia and canine diabetes. During sabbatical leave in Belgium, he observes many diabetic dogs and uses for the first time in veterinary medicine the terms "type 1 and type 2" in animal diabetes—the same names now used for human diabetes.
  • Jerry Gillespie, EI Eger, Eugene Steffey and Steve Haskins join as charter diplomates and officers of the American College of Veterinary Anesthesiology, helping the group achieve full accreditation as a specialty by the American Veterinary Medical Association.

1974

  • Murray Fowler initiates a residency program in zoological medicine in cooperation with the Sacramento Zoo. This partnership ultimately expands to the San Diego Zoo and Wildlife Park for a comprehensive, three-year specialty experience. When the Sacramento Zoo builds its own animal hospital on site, the hospital bears Fowler's name in recognition of his clinical and educational contributions.

1973

  • Harold Parker performs much of the initial work on peritoneal dialysis in small animals, which provides the foundation for the establishment in 1990 of the school’s pioneering program in hemodialysis.
  • Randall F. Pritchett, Alex Ardans and Yuan Zee identify and characterize a previously unknown adenovirus in a foal with pneumonia. The authors note that although adenoviruses are found in many animals, it is not common to find a natural infection caused by adenoviruses, so diagnosticians are cautioned to assess laboratory results carefully.
  • The Oak Tree Racing Association donates funds to establish the Equine Research Laboratory, now the Center for Equine Health. One of the first projects in the partnership involves the investigation of pulmonary bleeding in racehorses.
  • The school becomes the first veterinary school in North America to adopt a core-and-track curriculum. By 1978, all students receive their fourth-year training in the clinics of the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital. Other schools follow the School of Veterinary Medicine model.
  • The Center for Equine Health is established in response to the need for research to improve the health of California’s large horse population.

1972

  • J. D. "Don" Wheat and John Hughes lead an initiative to establish the Equine Research Laboratory (now known as the Center for Equine Health) to promote research and teaching efforts to advance the health of horses.
  • The first director of the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, Robert Cello, draws attention to many issues such as hyperinsulinism in dogs, viral respiratory diseases in cats, feline infectious anemia and electrolyte changes in interstitial nephritis. Cello's professional curiosity and talents lead him ultimately to develop a new specialty in veterinary medicine to address eye problems in animals. He is the first to describe several infections and anomalies—conjunctivitis, keratitis, glaucoma of dogs, infections of the canine eye and the parasite causing ocular onchocerciasis in horses.

1971

  • Dr. Anthony Stannard pioneers the modern discipline of veterinary dermatology and dermatopathology. In addition to his investigations of skin disorders in horses, he earns highest accolades as a teacher to veterinary students and mentor of young faculty members.

1970

  • The Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital begins a new era in clinical veterinary medicine. The innovative programs set milestones in veterinary medical teaching, advanced training for residents, clinical research and community service. The facility becomes the incubator for new disciplines in the profession. Constructed for 3,000 patients, the facility serves 30,000 patients by the 1990s, 50,000 by 2015, and 60,000 by 2020.
  • A paper on the components of California smog by Donald Dungworth and fellow veterinary faculty provides the basis for the first air quality standards set down by the original Clean Air Act. These standards, updated several times with the help of the school's researchers, are used throughout the world, providing just one reason that the group remains the premier pulmonary disease research program in the world.
  • Larry Zane McFarland pioneers studies on the interrelatedness of environmental health and ecology—the influence of environmental factors on body processes. He helps raise society's awareness of anatomical characteristics and physiological mechanisms that permit animals in greatly different environments to survive. His article on the role of selenium in the neural physiology of chickens, turkeys and quail is just one example.
  • Harold Parker plays a dynamic part in the development of modern veterinary medical specialties, including veterinary critical care medicine and intensive care. He organizes emergency and critical care services and facilities at the teaching hospital. In the nascent clinical training program, he crafts the first courses in the discipline and, along with Peter Kennedy, Robert Cello and other innovators, exerts a profound influence on the clinical training model.
  • Shortly after the opening of the teaching hospital, founding faculty member Raymond A. Bankowski is instrumental in establishing the school's clinical residency training program in avian medicine.
  • In addition to its mission to provide the best veterinary care possible to laboratory animals, the Comparative Pathology Laboratory provides training to members of other institutions related to the health of research animals.
  • Pharmacist Reed Enos, under the direction of Robert Cello, manages the first pharmacy based in a veterinary teaching hospital. Enos, Cello, Dwight Hirsh and Ernest Biberstein develop a reporting system for adverse drug reactions, a hospital formulary and an antibiotic resistance program. Seminars led by Enos, Hirsh and Gerald Ling on antibiotic resistance become the model for other veterinary school teaching programs and a national network of veterinary pharmacists.
  • After significant research in the 1960s on the bluetongue virus affecting sheep, Jack Howarth participates on a team organized by the United States Agency for International Development and the government of Uganda to increase livestock production. He establishes a tissue culture laboratory to focus on Nairobi sheep disease. This work leads to a diagnostic test and immunizing procedures instrumental in the control of this important disease throughout the continent. He advises officials of Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania. Howarth also participates with programs in Brazil (helping establish a national veterinary research arm for Brazil's agricultural research organization), Venezuela, Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname, Barbados, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Haiti and Jamaica to enhance research, improve diagnostic capability and control infectious diseases of livestock.
  • Jiro "Jerry" Kaneko authors a book on biochemistry for veterinarians that has been reissued at least five times.
  • Margaret Meyer pioneers a unique method, based on oxidative metabolism, to distinguish the three main Brucella bacteria and several others. Meyer's test offers the first uniform procedure to identify brucellosis, a cattle disease that causes illness in humans when they drink unpasteurized milk or eat undercooked meat from infected animals. Meyer's work enables epidemiologists to describe risk factors in animal populations, identify reservoirs and trace infections back to the source. England, Germany, France, Russia, Turkey, India, Argentina, South Africa, Mexico and the United States all adopt the test. Meyer's research in veterinary public health helps stop the spread of the disease in animals and people around the world.
  • Timothy O'Brien, Roy Pool and John D Wheat, specialists respectively in equine medicine, bone pathology and radiology, lay the groundwork for orthopedic research addressing injury problems of performance horses.
  • One of only two microsurgeons in the state, Ira “Gary” Gourley leads the first microsurgical training in both the School of Veterinary Medicine and the School of Medicine. Countless students achieve proficiency thanks to Gourley's expertise in plastic and reconstructive surgery. Gourley and other progressive faculty help define the ground-breaking professional DVM "core and track" curriculum, which provides a foundation in comparative veterinary medicine and electives for exploration of species-specific interests. The approach grows into a model for other veterinary schools.
  • The laboratory of pharmacology professor Robert McKernon Joy focuses on the neurotoxic effects of chemicals, particularly chlorinated hydrocarbons (e.g., dieldrin, endrin and lindane), pyrethroid insecticides and various injectable anesthetics. Joy's laboratory demonstrates that lindane enhances transmitter release and that this effect can be attributed to an increase in intracellular calcium from stores within the cell itself. This work is internationally recognized. Joy contributes significant expertise in the veterinary curriculum and in the core curriculum for the Graduate Group of Pharmacology and Toxicology.
  • Robert Bushnell, Veterinary Medicine Extension specialist, dedicates his career to public practice; his applied research projects identify him as a successor to the veterinary faculty who have improved the prevention and control of mastitis in dairy cows. Bushnell's initiative to provide milk culturing services to California dairy farmers leads to the opening of the Milk Quality Laboratory that now handles 50,000 samples per year. Bushnell is instrumental in establishing new dairy industry standards for sanitation and modern milking and pasteurization equipment; his service to the community regarding bovine mastitis, milk quality and dairy food safety leads to university recognition and a national award for distinguished service.

1960-1969

1969

  • The UC Davis student chapter of the AVMA presented framework for developing a national student association, which was adopted and implemented by AVMA that same year..

1968

  • The scholarly achievements of Peter Kennedy lead to a NATO postdoctoral fellowship; he earns a Fulbright-Hays Fellowship and "serves with distinction" as a consultant to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
  • Faculty member and alumnus Gerald V. Ling immediately influences the school's first veterinary training programs in endocrinology, hematology and internal medicine. After the opening of the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital in 1970, Ling also helps establish the Small Animal Emergency and Small Animal Outpatient services.

1967

  • Internationally recognized medical entomologist Michel M. J. Lavoipierre joins the faculty as a professor of parasitology. With extensive experience in Africa and the Mediterranean, he provides insights regarding the impact of vector-borne diseases, such as malaria and leishmaniasis, upon animals and people. He investigates how blood-feeding arthropods attach and how their hosts react. Lavoipierre also provides substantial knowledge about the ecology of mites, fleas and related arthropods; the transmission of arthropod-borne diseases and their vectors; mosquito physiology; and the biology of the mite and sand fly.
  • Arnold Rosenwald, a highly respected poultry specialist of Veterinary Medicine Extension, is instrumental in initiating the industry-oriented Poultry Health Symposium, a significant training outreach program for veterinarians and producers. Rosenwald's Extension position encompasses significant service over several decades.
  • Virologist Livio Raggi serves as one of the first coordinators of the burgeoning program of continuing education, bringing practitioners together with faculty and earning recognition from the California Veterinary Medical Association for his leadership.
  • Large animal veterinarian Murray Fowler launches the world’s first Zoological Medicine Service; this service dedicated to the health of zoo species and exotic animals becomes the model for similar programs at veterinary schools around the world.
  • Calvin Schwabe, Hans Riemann, Margaret Meyer, Charles Franti and other faculty introduce a revolutionary professional veterinary curriculum to apply the principles and strategies of epidemiology for mass disease control and prevention in animals. The Master of Preventive Veterinary Medicine degree program, the first of its kind, has since trained leaders in more than 75 countries, benefiting population health and ecosystem health around the world.
  • Nicholas Lerche directs the Pathogen Detection Laboratory of the California National Primate Research Center, where his new methods result in more accurate and efficient diagnostic tests that improve the health of specific pathogen free nonhuman primate colonies. The laboratory offer tools for technology transfer, training, characterized controls and reagents and proficiency testing for workers in other primate centers around the nation.
  • John Hughes leads the effort to focus research on horse health by establishing and directing the Equine Diseases Research Laboratory, now the Center for Equine Health.

1966

  • Calvin Schwabe, with Hans Riemann, et al., inaugurates the Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, the first of its kind in a veterinary school. The Graduate Group in Epidemiology grows to be an international training ground. In 1969, the school awards the world’s first doctorate in veterinary epidemiology to Peter Schantz.
  • Blaine McGowan, the preeminent expert on sheep diseases in the US, is the first to diagnose contagious epididymitis in rams. Along with Biberstein, Kennedy and Robinson, McGowan also makes significant contributions to the control of contagious foot rot and pneumonias of sheep.
  • Associate Dean James Russell Douglas exerts substantial influence on the school's development during the changes of expanding enrollment, curricular change—especially at the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital—and physical plant expansion. He also is in demand to advise veterinary schools just opening in such diverse places as Taiwan, Chile (the Convenio), Florida, Mississippi and other locations.

1965

  • The school and campus enter academic partnership with the University of Chile under the Convenio, an international agreement funded by the Ford Foundation. Veterinary faculty contribute new knowledge to producers in Chile, improving agricultural conditions and advising on practical strategies such as how to prevent the loss of cattle during extended periods of drought. Veterinary graduate student exchange becomes a fruitful outcome of the agreement.

1964

  • Virologist Raymond Bankowski identifies a new avian influenza virus in turkeys in the San Joaquin Valley—the first reported appearance of an avian influenza virus in the United States since 1929. Bankowski's group introduces methods for diagnosis and mass immunization by aerosol vaccination as well as a patent for a tissue culture vaccine to protect poultry.
  • Faculty launch the first food safety program in a veterinary school, establishing the veterinarian's role in protecting food sources from diseases and contamination.

1963

  • Peter Kennedy, Jubb and Palmer publish Pathology of Domestic Animals, a 1,000-page reference that remains in daily use in veterinary pathology laboratories.
  • Arthur Black’s articles on ruminant metabolism and the biosynthesis of milk in cows brings recognition in the form of the AVMA Borden Award. Black works extensively with collaborator Max Kleiber to examine amino acids in lactating cows. Using radioactive isotopes, they track metabolic processes through the soil-plant-animal systems.
  • The school, under the direction of A.G. Edward, pioneers a laboratory animal care program like none other in the country. NIH funding follows in 1964 for graduate education in laboratory animal medicine and comparative pathology. The program promotes combined residency and research training that is soon outstanding in its field.
  • Gordon Thielen is the first to report that cows on a particular dairy farm display symptoms of leukemia. With mentor Oscar Schalm, Thielen successfully identifies leukocytosis in 30 percent of the dairy's herd, a discovery that ultimately leads to greater scientific understanding of leukemia and its viral basis. Thielen's interest in veterinary oncology blossoms as he discovers the first cancer virus in turkeys with tumors from a stem cell leukemia. Theilen's group also identifies the sarcoma virus in cats; the oncogenes turn out to be related to oncogenes in human cancer. The discoveries raise awareness of the value of comparative pathology, which remains one of the strengths of the school.

1962

  • William R. Pritchard begins a 20-year tenure as dean; he begins by preparing for major expansion in facilities and the professional curriculum to meet the evolving needs of society. His administrative acumen helps the school gain stronger funding during this phase. By becoming a line-item in the university-wide budget, the school receives some protection from local campus budget decisions and greater recognition as the only veterinary school in the UC system. To address the widening scope of veterinary medicine and education, Pritchard, McFarland and other faculty leaders complete a comprehensive self-study document that gives rise to major curricular and policy changes implemented in the 1970s.
  • John Christensen, John Osebold and James Douglas identify deer in California as a reservoir of the rickettsial disease of cattle called Anaplasma marginale. The discovery becomes a major factor in the decision not to attempt to eradicate anaplasmosis in the state. Jack Howarth later is credited as co-author of a paper identifying the tick as the carrier of the pathogen in cattle.
  • The California National Primate Research Center opens. Veterinary scientists carry out federally supported studies on nutrition, reproduction, effects of aging on cognition and memory, and birth defects from thalidomide and other agents. The center develops the simian model for research and early vaccine trials related to HIV and AIDS. Personnel also advance the health and care of nonhuman primates used in human health studies.

1961

  • Jack Moulton becomes best known as the author of Tumors in Domestic Animals, a pioneering text that helps establish veterinary oncology as a specialty in veterinary medicine. The book remains an essential reference for veterinary pathologists and oncologists.
  • After working as a laboratory technician for more than a decade and despite policy obstacles, Margaret Meyer becomes the first woman at UC Davis to obtain a doctorate in comparative pathology. She later earns distinction as the nation's first professor of veterinary public health in research microbiology. Meyer continues throughout her career to break barriers encountered by female scientists.

1960

  • James R. Douglas becomes chair of the Department of Veterinary Microbiology; he and colleague Norman Baker later publish "Chemotherapy of Animal Parasites," a review of drug therapies used in the control of parasites in livestock.
  • Peter Kennedy, H. Olander and Jack Howarth outline the pathology of epizootic bovine abortion, a disease of great economic importance to California cattle ranchers. Kennedy influences investigations through the end of the century when his successors describe the bacteria involved, demonstrate experimental reproduction of the disease, identify its vector and make progress with a practical vaccine.
  • Theodore Hage becomes president of the Northern California Radiological Society, probably the first time a veterinary radiologist is so honored.
  • Ernst Biberstein, Gills, and Knight publish "Serological types of Pasteurella hemolytica," which fosters research into the 1980s responsible for characterization and reclassification of the pathogen as Bibersteinia trehalosi. By 1975, research conducted by Charles Hjerpe shows that Pasteurella pneumonias resistant to one or more commonly used antimicrobial treatments are the predominant cause of feedlot cattle death. Faculty develop the industry standard for treatment.
  • Faculty publish 125 research papers, up from 29 in 1948. In a mere five years, the research budget rises from $218,000 to $1.8 million, including NIH funding for studies and for construction of facilities.
  • Walter Tyler conducts early experiments dealing with how young US Navy submarine personnel contract COPD, not a disease of young people. Tyler's investigations, in cooperation with UCSF medical personnel and supported by the US Navy, involve casts of lungs and several demonstrations that thoracic surgery can be performed on horses, the animal model for the disease under study. Tyler contributes much to training and research on veterinary physiology using specialized equipment for lung studies, thoracic surgery, large animal anesthesiology and the measurement of gases and cardiac function.
  • Virologist Delbert Grant McKercher is the first to implicate chlamydial agents and viruses in respiratory and genital diseases of ruminants. His work also contributes basic evidence about chlamydial infection of cats.
  • John Frank Christensen brings expertise from public and private practice to solve practical problems of the livestock breeder, including coccidiosis of domestic livestock.
  • Founding faculty member Donald Jasper, an expert in Mycoplasma mastitis in dairy cattle, sets the stage for future successes with his research focused on milk quality, mastitis screening and mechanisms to prevent udder injuries.
  • Terrell Holliday earns a reputation as one of the premier veterinary neurologists in the world based on publications about nerve conduction and muscle health, which he assesses using electromyography, spinal cord evoked potentials, electroencephalography, and brainstem auditory evoked potential (BAER) testing. Holliday organizes the first US program in veterinary neurology later in the decade.
  • Students voice increased interest in curriculum development, serve on committees and begin publishing course evaluations that provide valuable feedback for instructors.
  • The "father" of veterinary hematology, Oscar Schalm, organizes the first veterinary department of clinical pathology in the world.

 

1950-1959

1958

  • Investigating the safety and efficacy of animal vaccines, Livio Raggi recognizes a new virus contained within a live-virus vaccine meant to prevent infectious bronchitis, a severe respiratory disease of poultry. Raggi warns that the non-standard vaccine is likely spreading the new virus throughout California. The poultry industry helps support construction of a high-security poultry disease research building for the use of the growing program dedicated to such infectious diseases.
  • Following earlier work that forms the basis for worldwide control of brucellosis in swine, Hugh Cameron investigates antibodies accumulating in the mammary gland of chronically infected cattle and fosters the use of the whey test for brucellosis in cattle as an alternative diagnostic procedure to the testing of blood serum. His work provides national guidelines to eradicate one of the world's most serious diseases in humans and animals. Cameron's studies with Margaret Meyer show differences in the metabolic patterns of Brucella organisms and provide a much-needed tool for differentiating species and types within the genus. Their teamwork leads to further scientific and practical advances by Meyer.
  • Walter Tyler begins his research with a grant to continue studies where his doctoral thesis, "Quantitative Anatomy of the Appendicular Skeleton," has left off. His goal is to diagnose and reduce the incidence of bovine dwarfism, which may cause heavy losses to beef producers whose cattle carry the genetic mutation. Tyler investigates other serious diseases in poultry and cattle, including muscular dystrophy.

1957

  • Delbert Grant McKercher, Jack Moulton, S. Madin and John Kendrick identify and characterize bovine herpes virus 1, the agent causing infectious bovine rhinotracheitis and other economically important infections in dairy and beef cattle. In 1964, faculty develop a vaccine to protect against the virus. Later, Kendrick leads efforts at the school to study aspects of reproductive health.
  • As Peter C. Kennedy develops science's understanding of fetal and endocrine pathology, he and Louis W. Holm detect the importance of the fetal pituitary adrenal-axis as the triggering mechanism for ruminant parturition and help define other factors involved with prolonged gestation in ruminants. Kennedy is the first to recognize many classic diseases, including Hemophilus agni septicemia, a fatal disease in sheep, and Hemophilus somnus, associated with infectious meningoencephalitis in cattle. He initially describes Boxer colitis, insulin-producing pancreatic endocrine tumors, cerebellar hypoplasia in horses, behavioral changes associated with ovarian tumors in mares, and ram epididymitis. These discoveries bring the school recognition as one of the top pathology programs in the world.

1956

  • Raymond Bankowski solves the mystery of an undiagnosed respiratory illness in chickens when he detects a viral disease agent that he calls Paramyxovirus yucaipa after the Southern California town of Yucaipa, where he first isolates the pathogen.

1955

  • Jacob Traum designates vesicular exanthema of swine, a disease indistinguishable clinically from foot and mouth disease, as a separate entity. This new awareness empowers veterinarians to rule out the dreaded foot and mouth disease in cattle, since vesicular exanthema only infects swine, and helps the agricultural industry avoid costly false alarms.
  • James Douglas and Norman Baker complete experiments on the efficacy of phenothiazine to de-worm lambs.

1954

  • Donald Jasper assumes the deanship; by the end of his watch in 1962, women are being admitted to the DVM program and the school achieves full accreditation.
  • John B. Enright isolates the rabies virus from an insect-eating bat in California, only the fourth geographical area in which such an isolation has been successful. His achievement reveals the important role of bats as carriers of rabies in this and other countries. Enright's related studies illuminate biology, environment, pathogenesis, hibernation and other factors aimed to prevent or reduce disease after an exposure, including studies of the effectiveness of rabies vaccination techniques in humans. Enright's research success and leadership abilities influences the entire teaching, research and service mission, enriching student studies in biology while reducing the use of animals in teaching.

1953

  • Pathologist Jack Moulton joins the young veterinary faculty, and, despite limitations to technology at the time, becomes one of the earliest scientists to make progress in understanding spongiform encephalopathy, particularly scrapie, in sheep.
  • Delbert Grant McKercher, Blaine McGowan, Jack Howarth and J. Saito are the first to recognize bluetongue virus in the Western world and its presence in the California sheep industry. The colleagues develop, refine and facilitate widespread use of an effective vaccine.

1952

  • The virology laboratory led by Raymond Bankowski serves as one of only two in the nation permitted to work with the highly infectious viral agent involved in an outbreak of vesicular exanthema infection in US swine. The virologists are key participants in the control and eradication of the outbreak.
  • The Atomic Energy Commission funds George Hart's studies of radiation in animals that proves to be of world-wide interest regarding nuclear bomb explosions, reactor failures or terrorism. In 1957, based on the success of the project, the commission authorizes investigations into the effects of low-level strontium 90 and radium 226 ("fallout") exposure. Study results expand society's understanding concerning radiation biology and toxicology. Just before the program ends in 1986, faculty experts are called upon to advise on cleanup after the Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident.

1951

  • Arnold Rosenwald, a highly respected poultry specialist of Veterinary Medicine Extension, founds the Western Poultry Disease Conference, a meeting that evolves into a renowned international conference on avian diseases.

1950

  • John Osebold becomes a specialist in the Agricultural Experiment Station and later joins the School of Veterinary Medicine faculty as a professor of immunology.
  • Small animal surgeon Robert Leighton describes the method he has developed to pin fractured bones until new bone can grow around it. Used for more than 20 years, the method is the precursor to current techniques. Over the years as clinician and instructor, Leighton invents a number of surgical instruments and performs the first surgery of the infraspinatus, a muscle of the shoulder. Leighton is also associated with novel repairs of ruptured anterior cruciate ligaments in dogs. He collaborates with a veterinarian, a physician and an engineer to develop one of the first practical canine total hip replacements.
  • Because the school is an outgrowth of the Agriculture Experiment Station, Clarence Haring takes charge in directing the AES. Arnold Rosenwald is the first Extension poultry veterinarian at the University of California, serving in Berkeley for four years and then in the school in Davis from 1950 until his retirement in 1977. The school hires John Albert Howarth as an Extension veterinarian. (Howarth's son later becomes a faculty member.) Extension veterinarians stay in close touch with county advisors via in-person meetings and farm publications to discuss laws and methods concerning handling of animal diseases, new drugs and novel therapeutic measures.
  • Donald Cordy, Peter C. Kennedy and Jack Moulton found the Department of Veterinary Pathology. Cordy's pathology publications, co-authored by specialists in several disciplines, cover numerous disease processes in avian and livestock species.
  • Virologist John Enright presents the first serological evidence of Sporadic Bovine Encephalomyelitis virus in California. His seminal studies in mammals and birds of California describe the ecology of Q-fever (Coxiella burnetii), a disease that can be transmitted to humans from cattle, sheep, goats and other animals.
  • Henry Elliott Adler, previously a pathologist for the CA State Department of Agriculture, develops and applies the first really effective bacterin vaccine against erysipelas, an infection that causes sudden death and poses a serious challenge for turkey producers. Adler's diagnostic tool to detect carriers of Mycoplasma gallisepticum serves as a vital advance in eradicating the respiratory infection in turkeys and chickens. Adler also contributes to improvements in egg-sanitizing procedures, hatchery management and efforts to control Salmonella and paracolon infections in turkeys.
  • Theodore John Hage is one of only two people specializing in radiology in US veterinary schools. His development of radiographic diagnosis of hip dysplasia in young dogs produces a significant impact on canine breeding by permitting early identification and prevention of the genetic defect in future generations. This pioneer, widely respected for his diagnostic skill, establishes an association with medical radiologists that results in the growth of comparative radiology California.
  • Founding faculty member Oscar William Schalm makes discoveries that improve management of bovine mastitis, a disease that costs producers nearly $2 billion each year. Schalm's key studies concern the treatment of Streptococcus agalactiae and new strategies for management and development of the California Mastitis Test, still in common use throughout the United States. Schalm’s fundamental insights on the pathogenesis of mastitis and understanding of hematology result in far-reaching concepts of the role of leukocytes in the pathogenesis of mastitis and their part in protecting against infection.
  • Founding faculty member Clyde Stormont becomes the first to identify the 12 blood group systems in cattle. He is also the first to describe the eight genetic systems of red blood cell antigens and their antibodies in horses. The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory developed from this knowledge proves valuable to breeders of many species, including cattle, horses, bison, llamas, dogs, cats and exotics. The laboratory evolves into what may be the largest animal DNA identification center in the world, offering testing services regarding genetic diseases, verification of pedigrees and forensic analysis concerning animal-related crimes.
  • While working in Africa, Jack Moulton makes major contributions to the understanding of several important diseases, including African swine fever, East Coast fever and trypanosomiasis, (sleeping sickness). With the support of two Fulbright scholarships, Moulton studies disease problems in Kenya, advises the University of Zimbabwe on establishing a veterinary school and mentors African students who study at UC Davis.
  • Hugh Cameron, a member of the original planning committee for the School of Veterinary Medicine, continues to publish essential data about the zoonosis brucellosis, a career interest held since publishing his first articles in 1932. Early studies on the viability of Brucella abortus help provide guidelines for the National Program to Eradicate Bovine Brucellosis in the United States. Throughout the 1950s Cameron produces more than 40 papers on the topic as well as publications on other diseases. After Jacob Traum's discovery of brucellosis in California swine, Cameron designs and proposes a technique to control the disease; swine producers in many parts of the world adopt the plan.
  • Ernest Biberstein develops medical microbiology methods applicable to veterinary practice. In the 1960s, Biberstein is also tapped to share his expertise in the School of Medicine, and he shapes laboratory course work relevant to both professions. His approach adapts easily to the clinical cases and training as the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital opens in the 1970s.

1940-1949

1949

  • One of the first examples of international service provided by the school faculty occurs when virologist Raymond Bankowski travels to Mexico to lend expertise about a foot and mouth disease outbreak and gain knowledge that helps protect US herds from the highly contagious infection.

1948

  • The school opens its doors to 42 students, all male and nearly all veterans of World War II.
  • Anatomy becomes the first professional course in the School of Veterinary Medicine. Under the leadership of Logan Julian and Kenneth B. DeOme, instruction is organized around a new concept of teaching by using a quantitative rather than descriptive approach, separating basic and applied anatomy to foster student appreciation of the structural basis for functions. The new method saves classroom time, serves as a curriculum example to other veterinary schools, and contributes to many research projects.
  • Delbert Grant McKercher, virologist, develops and teaches, single-handedly at first, the first course in veterinary microbiology. He also includes the study of immunology, pathogenic bacteria, fungi, and viruses. McKercher's original syllabus becomes the main reference for certain basic microbiological procedures in the laboratory.
  • George H. Hart, veterinarian and animal scientist, takes on the mantle of dean and, as Haring did before him, avidly promotes faculty engagement in research as the basis for excellence in teaching. Hart recruits basic scientists as well as clinicians and encourages students to explore research beyond their veterinary studies. Under his leadership, the school launches investigations for the Atomic Energy Commission, Public Health Service and other organizations. Hart's service follows a career of practical achievements in research and veterinary public health. For example, Hart revolutionizes thinking on problems in animal husbandry by focusing on genetics, nutrition and physiology. Hart’s laboratory results routinely demonstrate practical solutions in the field for commercial producers. In veterinary public health, Hart's services as city veterinarian of Los Angeles vastly improves procedures in the production and handling of market milk.
  • Avian specialist Raymond Bankowski and colleagues of the CDFA studying Newcastle disease in chickens report in Science that virus particles can be recovered from the air as a result of natural infection. The team develops methods for diagnosis and for mass immunization by aerosol vaccination, and Bankowski patents a new tissue culture vaccine in the 1940s that prevents heavy losses in flocks throughout California and other states.
  • Among the school's first students is Blaine McGowan, Jr, of Eureka, CA; his avid interest in becoming a veterinarian and his family's influence in public life were pivotal in establishing the state's only veterinary school. McGowan later serves as a faculty member, making key discoveries in food animal health.
  • At Haring's retirement from the university, George H. Hart becomes dean. Already a distinguished figure among agricultural producers and a seasoned researcher and instructor of animal husbandry, Hart hires top-flight faculty as well as teaching reproduction and jurisprudence in the third and fourth year curriculum.

1947

  • Clarence M. Haring is appointed as the school’s first dean. Haring's leadership, curriculum planning efforts and advising are key to the opening of the school to instruction.
  • Stuart Anderson Peoples signs on to the faculty as professor and chair of the Department of Physiological Sciences and actively leads development of the academic programs.

1946

  • After intense planning and the disruptions of World War II, the university regents establish the veterinary school and sets its location in Davis.

1940

  • Charles Stream of San Diego County and Michael Burns of Humboldt County introduce AB 15 to fund a veterinary school in California; the bill passes unanimously and is signed in 1941 by Governor Culbert Olson.
  • Virology researcher John B. Enright uncovers new knowledge about the adaptation of poliomyelitis virus to growth in eggs and its susceptibility to attenuation. These findings ultimately contribute to the development of highly successful attenuated polio vaccines.

1930-1939

1938

  • Agricultural producers, legislators and private citizens press for the establishment of a veterinary institution in California. The agriculture department publicizes a series of livestock disease outbreaks, and individuals cite the need for veterinarians and a place to train Californians for the profession.

1930s

  • Jerry Beach, co-author of an indispensable publication on poultry diseases in California, discovers how Vitamin A prevented a nutritional deficiency in poultry, the first time the vitamin's role had been examined.
  • Before selection as the school's first dean, Clarence Haring identifies the agent that causes equine encephalomyelitis, now controlled worldwide by vaccination. He develops the first intradermal skin test for bovine tuberculosis that helps the US reduce bovine TB to less than two-tenths of one percent. Contributions from Haring and colleagues about the effect of a nationally used vaccine lead to almost universal use of this immunization to help control brucellosis.
  • Jacob Traum identifies brucellosis in swine, one of the first of several faculty to tackle this stubborn disease. The scholarship and planning of these and other founding faculty members set the example of teaching, research and service that inform veterinary education at UC Davis to this day.