Monday, December 31, 2018

Fundraising for Amaru and Animals in Need

Visit our current fundraising page! Amaru needs your help!




Bioparque Amaru Zoo is a wildlife rescue and sanctuary for animals who have been victims of illegal wildlife trafficking, habitat destruction, or abuse at the hands of humans as pets or circus attractions. Between November 2017 to the present, they have taken in 457 animals for treatment and placement. This in addition to the over 915 individuals currently living on the 1000+ acres of the zoo property in the hills of Cuenca, Ecuador in the Southern Andes.

I have worked with Amaru's organization for over 5 years now, and their growth has been exponential. We have watched their team quadruple in size, their exhibits double, and helped crowd-fund the cost to build them a vet clinic in 2013, which was completed in 2014.

The intake of wild animals in need is never-ending.

Amaru's mission is to educate the public on the incredible biodiversity in their home country. According to the Biodiversity Institute, "roughly 8% of amphibian species, 5% of reptile species, 8% of mammal species, and 16% of bird species in the world are found in Ecuador, which comprises only 0.2% of the world’s land area". That's over 1,600 bird species- 128 hummingbird species alone, in an area roughly twice the size of my home state, Pennsylvania.

Through community outreach, education on the zoo property, conservation research involving local volunteers, and nation-wide efforts to raise awareness of issues threatening beloved species like the Andean Condor, Spectacled Bear, and Harlequin Frogs, Amaru is trying to do its part to encourage people to make lifestyle changes and demand protection of its wild places and their inhabitants.  The government brings them conviscated wildlife to rehabilitate and, if they are non-releasable due to injury or illness, they place them in an appropriately natural enclosure at the zoo. This helps city-dwellers and visitors get closer to these animals and foster an appreciation for them, while learning about the issues that took them out of the wild in the first place.

More than ever, they need help to support their efforts to heal, release, research, and care for these victims of the illegal wildlife trade. Every day at Amaru is another step forward in getting people to understand the value of natural life and tropical ecology; it's another child taught why monkeys aren't pets, and even the smallest stream is important for frogs and fish, and ultimately, humans.

I am asking for help in donations to help Amaru purchase refurbished and new hospital equipment for their Zoo and Wildlife Veterinary Clinic.  These medical tools will cost them anywhere between $12,000 and $39,000, depending if we get them donated in the United States versus buying them from companies in Ecuador, where tech is more expensive.

The basic list so far is as follows-

Sevoflurane Inhalant Anesthesia Machine

Oxygen concentrator

Dry sterilizer

Multi-parameter monitor (shockproof)

Surgical instrumentation equipment Manometer

Portable ultrasound

Microhematocrit Centrifuge

Ganzo neck lamp

Electrocardiograph

Stethoscopes

Autoclave

Infusion pump

Ceiling lights for operating room

Flow meters

Stainless steel cage for Hospitalization

Washing well

Surgery shelves

Stainless steel table

A pricing document  with more specific details can be found in my google drive here:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1FWdS8NZlB7BkCRl98zpMCQ1gg3ERa4IuHo6EZ6W5_dQ/edit?usp=sharing

Since we built the vet clinic in 2014, almost 2,000 animals have benefitted from hospitalization and care. There have been over 15 workshops training future zoo and wildlife vets from over 11 countries (for example, this one:
https://www.mightycause.com/story/Amarupanamericanaeducation?fbclid=IwAR3jbxUy3OcoFc0EXFrGHyL-fqockOCg7PC2WHQpyITDEDXSTZ-mv6SLM5s ), and with your help, that scope could widen.

This is a fantastic way to promote the conservation of biodiversity across the globe.


We are starting with the lofty goal of $20,000. We are hoping to raise this in just 33 days:  our fundraiser will end on JANUARY 16th, 2019. At the conclusion of this, I will bring some donated equipment to Ecuador, and help them buy the rest of it in-country.

All donors will receive special, personalized thanks on behalf of the Zoo and its animals at the conclusion.





Bioparqe Amaru was a vision hatched in mid- 2007 during biological surveys of the Andean highland river basins around Cuenca, where there are now many mining projects. These studies were the first to bring together many Ecuadorian and foreign biologists, environmental activists, and other professionals associated with the local and national government.

This group, aware of the need for more public conservation education, centers for wildlife rescue, and biological stations for constant environemtnal monitoring, began the construction of Bioparque Amaru Zoo, whose mission is:

"To promote and facilitate the knowledge, respect, appreciation, research, conservation and dissemination of knowledge of Ecuador's incredible and abundant native flora, fauna, natural and cultural resources. The conservation of tropical biodiversity, especially the native biodiversity of Ecuador, will be the main focus of the Zoo, which will always take into account the protection, rehabilitation and/or reintroduction of wildlife; as well as the ecological processes, evolution, equilibrium, interaction with and dependence upon the natural environment."

I first met the Arbelaez family in 2013, working for the National Aviary (Pittsburgh, PA). Ernesto, the director, his wife Amanda (a biologist and botanist, and Vicky, administrative director, were working around the clock to improve the quality of life for the animals they cared for and gave sanctuary. They are some of the most dedicated, optimistic, and inspirational people I have ever met.

Working with them was one of the many reasons I decided to go to vet school, with the hope to practice conservation medicine both locally and globally.

Please consider donating to their cause for future populations of animals!

For more information, see the official webpage for the zoo:

http://www.zoobioparqueamaru.com/

Or their facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/zoologicocuenca/

Or my blog chronicling visits spanning 2013-2015:

http://onehealth47.blogspot.com/



Sincerest thanks,
Nikki Becich, DVM

Veterinarian at the Avian Conservation Center of Appalachia and Cheat Lake Animal Hospital
Field Associate for the National Aviary


Sunday, September 6, 2015

The National Aviary goes to Ecuador: Amaru Summer Intern Collaboration, Part 2

Vets training vets: Dr.Pilar Fish and Dr.Katherine Costa

      Between July 13th and 25th of this year, Dr.Pilar Fish and one of her interns, Kira Hydock of University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, came down to Ecuador. They brought supplies donated by the National Aviary for the new clinic with them: medicines that are extremely costly to get in the country due to import taxes, and surgical tools and equipment that's almost impossible to find. The trip was originally planned as a teaching moment for us four vet students, Ernesto, and the zookeepers, but Dr.Fish was tasked with another project a few weeks before her arrival: prepare to train the incoming vet, Dr.Katherine Costa of Caracas, Venezuela.

      For the first month of Tim, Walker, and my stay, confiscations had been few (a tamarin, a couple Amazonian turtle species), but the minute Dr.Fish and Dr.Costa arrived, the cases trickled in: an injured Slaty thrush, two Barn owls, a Stygian owl, a Ball python, a Blue-headed parrot. We spent their first three or four days seeing the emergency arrivals and getting a tour of the zoo from Ernesto, who graciously put aside a large chunk of his time to make sure we maximized Dr.Fish's consulting time. She has worked with 42 organizations on (now) three continents over the 21 years of her practice, so she knows a lot about what makes a zoo or rescue center work! It was amazing to see her, Dr.Costa, and Ernesto brainstorming about how to improve the clinic, the exhibits, and the quality of care for some of the animals with special needs. 

I'm going to tell the story mostly in the pictures, as usual. If you want to check out the first half of our summer (when it was just me, Walker Roberts, and Tim Beichner) and our preliminary data collection for our avian parasite survey on the Pionus, Aratinga, Amazona, and Geranoaetus species, check out this previous post: 


Students Tim Beichner and Kira Hydock enjoying an Andean morning view on director Ernesto Arbelaez's rooftop. 
Geochelone denticulata, known as Tortugas Motelos in Ecuadorian Spanish. 

Elandris, the Black Chested Buzzard education eagle! She's Amaru's falconry bird. 

Dr.Pilar Fish of the National Aviary with Ernesto Arbelaez, zoo director, with all the donated supplies from the Aviary. 

     Dr.Fish brought down all of her preferred medicines for zoo animal and wildlife triage, as well as some essentials that are expensive to buy in Ecuador. We got to work using them immediately. On her zoo tours, Dr.Fish spotted a number of immediately treatable health conditions in the animals: ground tortoises with neck abscesses, a Galapagos tortoise with skin abnormalities to be managed, a Blue and Gold macaw with a broken blood feather, a troop of  squirrel monkeys with a chlamydia outbreak (probably not the kind you're thinking of!), and abrasions that looked like mites on Amaru's two newborn lions. That was just the beginning! The newly arrived microscope was crucial to the proper diagnosis of some of these problems. Dr.Costa was able to do cytology for the turtle abscesses, and skin scrapes on the lions to check for mites; she used it many more times over the course of Dr.Fish's stay, and is still using it today to monitor animals for parasites and bacterial infections.

      Dr.Costa's previous training was in small animal medicine (cats and dogs), but in Venezuela, she would read up on wildlife medicine to be prepared to take any injured wildlife into her clinic should the need arise, which it did with increasing frequency as she became known for successful treatments and releases. Katherine was old friends with Jose Vieira, the herpetologist and photographer from the group Tropical Herping working as Amaru's reptile keeper. He told her to check out their opening for a zoo vet, and she jumped on the opportunity to leave Caracas. For those of you who are unaware, the politics and economy of Venezuela are extremely unstable under current President Nicolas Maduro, and the violence and goods shortages in Caracas and most of the country are driving people like Katherine and Jose to leave. It's terrible that they can't comfortably do their work in their country, but we're glad to have them both at Amaru.

The summer vet crew from left to right: Tim Beichner from Kansas State Veterinary School, Dr.Katherine Costa from Venezuela, Dr.Pilar Fish of the National Aviary, Kira Hydock of Penn State Veterinary School, Walker Roberts from University of Florida Veterinary School, Nikki Becich from Tufts Veterinary School, and Ernesto Arbelaez, director of Bioparque Amaru Zoo and president of the Ecuadorian AZA. 

A confiscated juvenile Squirrel monkey facing socialization challenges. 

Dr.Fish explaining proper socialization and natural behavioral enrichment for young Squirrel monkeys. 

Tayra (a tropical mustelid) with a dental abscess under medical management. 

Zoo rounds and teaching time with Dr.Fish in the biology library for the vet students. 

Dr. Katherine Costa of Caracas, Venezuela, Amaru's temporary (hopefully permanent in the future!) veterinarian. 

Dr.Fish befriending one of Ecuador's many strays on a trip to see Andean Condor research sites in the Andes mountains. 

Future zoo enthusiast, Ernesto junior. 

Students and the Arbelaez family at Amaru and the Peregrine Fund's Andean Condor research site in the southern Andes. 

Dr.Fish was able to review major themes in animal enrichment, socialization, husbandry, and specific medical needs for Katherine over the course of her visit. The common deparistization drug ivermectin is toxic in turtles, birds who arrive as trauma cases should be treated with this combination of drugs, these monkeys need more heat, more housing. She came up with basic treatment plans for many of the zoo's animal groups suffering from manageable, chronic health conditions, and preventative plans for the others. And finally, she even got to delve into pathology when three of the zoo animals died over the course of her stay. Having someone trained to do necropsies and look for the appropriate warning signs in deceased animals at Amaru is a huge benefit to the animals that were housed near or with those animals; Dr.Fish was able to treat some Wooly and Capuchin monkeys for extreme gastric ulcers when the problem came up in a Wooly monkey who died a month and a half after her confiscation to Amaru.

Getting to learn alongside Dr.Fish and Katherine was such a privilege for the four of us who are still in vet school, too. It's great to be exposed to mentors that give you an idea of what your end-goal should be.

Searching for cause of death in a once-thought-extinct species of Atelopus frog from the Center for Conservation of Amphibians at Amaru. Such examinations are crucial to improving the medical care and husbandry of critically endangered species breeding programs. 

Dr.Fish explaining pathology during a necropsy of a recently arrived and recently deceased Wooly monkey. Monkeys that arrive confiscated can be in very poor condition, and doing this necropsy gave us the insight we needed to treat other individuals who arrived in the same confiscation so that they didn't meet the same fate. 
Necropsy on a newly arrived Caiman who died unexpectedly. The ientification of specific bacterial infections during necropsy gives the vets an idea of how to preventatively treat other animals who have been exposed to infected individuals.
Tim running through the basics of a physical exam with Dr.Katherine Costa on a Black Chested Buzzard Eagle. 

Doing blood draws and general physical exams on six Black Chested Buzzard eagles in one of Amaru's large aviary exhibits.

Doing blood draws and general physical exams on six Black Chested Buzzard eagles in one of Amaru's large aviary exhibits.

Kira Hydock learning about social behaviors in wooly monkeys from Dr.Fish. Training animals to be more comfortable around vets makes physical exams and medical procedures much less stressful for the animal and the vet. 

Dr.Fish, although financially supported by the National Aviary in her travels as part of our collaboration with Amaru, made a huge sacrifice in spending all of her holiday time working tirelessly to help improve the conditions at Amaru. We all learned a ton from her, and by expanding Dr.Costa's knowledge base so aggressively in those two short weeks, she will have benefited hundreds of animals through her teaching. She's a rare type of doctor and educator, and like I mentioned before, it was an honor to get to learn from her in a setting like Amaru!

Hopefully we can go back and do it all again sometime soon.

Dr.Fish helping Dr.Costa assess a group of tortoises with skin infections and lethargy. 

Triage and intake physical exams for three confiscated owls that arrived in banana crates to Amaru.
 This is Asio stygius, a Stygian owl. 

Dr.Fish describing new donated drugs and equipment to Ernesto. Thanks, National Aviary!

      It's amazing to see how much the zoo changes from year to year: the quality of nutrition and basic husbandry has drastically improved since I arrived in 2013, despite the continued deficiency in manpower due to lack of funds. They do SO MUCH with so little. In brainstorming the next steps forward for the zoo, Dr.Fish envisions more electricity in areas where animals need supplemental heat (most of the zoo is without power on the mountainside where it's located), more holding areas for separation of quarantined, recuperating, and rehabilitating wildlife that arrives, and the proper equipment to populate the intensive care unit and nursery in the clinic. Her drawings below outline some of the problems and proposed solutions for Amaru, but it's still just such a question of funds! Two or three more zookeepers are crucial to continuing to improve the standards of living for animals we can't release---and funding is crucial to keep improving the facilities to the point where Amaru can achieve one of its greatest goals: the professional rehabilitation and re-release of confiscated animals to their native environments in Ecuador.


Dr.Fish waking the group through a future structure for effective rehabilitation and release programs for wildlife. 

Dr.Fish's ideas for restructuring holding and quarantine areas in Amaru. 

Guambi, Amaru's rescued Andean Condor juvenile. 

Dr.Fish showing the Amaru Zoo staff new techniques for safe capture and handling of Andean condors! The tube reduces stress for Guambi, if people aren't holding his head manually, and protects the vets and zookeepers from being bitten. 

Physical exam, blood draw, and basic medical care for Guambi. 

The team outside of the National Aviary's sponsored Condor Aviary at Amaru! 

Dr.Fish teaching the theory and anatomy of broken blood feather extraction. 

Dr.Fish teaching the theory and anatomy of broken blood feather extraction. There was a Blue and Gold Macaw with a broken blood feather on exhibit at Amaru, and we went through the steps of when and how to treat the problem.

Jose Vieira, a herpetologist from Venezuela and Amaru's current reptile keeper, helps restrain a non-venomous snake for physical exam. 

The view from Bioparque Amaru Zoo at sunrise. 

Recheck exams on the Stygian Owl! Dr.Katherine Costa is in charge this time. 
Physical exam on the Stygian Owl. 

One of the Orange-winged Amazons in Amaru's off-exhibit holding area. Because Amaru wants to promote a conservation message and discourage the practice of taking wild animals as pets, all parrots who arrive talking are kept off-exhibit. 

Dr.Fish bird watching from Ernesto's rooftop mid-Andean-morning! Amanda Vega, Ernesto's wife, has executed a number of native planting projects at Amaru, meaning that there are many native Andean species living in restored habitat on zoo property. 

One of the tortoises undergoing treatment for skin abscesses at Amaru. 

Dr.Katherine Costa teaching better monkey behavior to the juvenile Squirrel monkey. 



Dr.Fish and Kira Hydock with an Andean specialty: tea made from horchata flower, lemongrass, and the chuquiraga flower. 

It was incredible to be part of an effort that made such a difference in so short a time. We're all rooting for Dr.Katherine as she continues to lead the team in caring for all the animals that arrive at Amaru: 33 animals over five taxa have arrived at Amaru since we left in mid-August. Her work is hard, and we're in contact with her to give the advice we can from afar until we can return. She's reading and learning and saving: she's removed an owl's infected eye, given supportive care to emaciated monkeys, disimpacted a snake, done orthopedic surgery on a deer, and much more in just the last few weeks. Suerte, Katherine!



Are you inspired to support Amaru as it continues to improve its conditions for the nearly 800 confiscated animals on zoo premises, and as it moves forward towards the goal of having the veterinary support to save, rehabilitate, and release confiscated animals back into the Ecuadorian wild? For convenience and certain tax-deductible donations, you can give through the National Aviary’s online donation system.  Choose the option donate to "Conservation and Field Research Department", and put "Ecuador," "Andean Condors," "Bioparque Amaru Zoo" or  how you would like to see the money used in the "In Honor Of" descriptor box.

Here is the link to the online donation system: https://www.aviary.org/Make-a-Donation

Thanks for reading! Keep checking in for intermittent updates throughout the year. If all goes well, we'll be back for more in summer of 2016!

Cheers, 
The Aviary-Amaru team

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Bioparque Amaru Wildlife and Zoo Clinic: 2015 Update

Bioparque Amaru Wildlife and Zoo Clinic in Cuenca, Ecuador: Summer 2015 Update

Welcome back to Amaru, Razoo fundraiser supporters and new readers! 

My name is Nikki Becich. I'm a veterinary student at Tufts Cummings School of Veterianry Medicine working as a field associate for the National Aviary in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I'm here to give you all an update on the state of our new and expanding Wildlife and Zoo clinic at Amaru! You can read more about what's been going on at Amaru over the past year from my previous post this summer (click here!), or stay tuned for an upcoming post about how the vet from the National Aviary, vet students from four schools and two countries, and the new Amaru zookeepers got together to work on health surveys, medical training, and brainstorming for improvement projects in the coming year!

If you're unfamiliar with Bioparque Amaru, you can visit their new website (English version coming soon!) here: BIOPARQUE AMARU. Or, if you'd like a bit of backstory on the collaboration between Bioparque Amaru Zoo and the aviary, keep reading. 

Bioparque Amaru Zoo is a facility that serves as a Wildlife rescue center for injured and confiscated native and non-native exotic species in the southern Ecuaorian Andes. The Ecuadorian Environmental Ministry brings the grand majority of animals confiscated from wildlife trafficking and injured in cities in the southern Andes and subtropics directly to Amaru for treatment and care. Most of these animals can't be released due to old injury and/or extensive periods in captivity, and thus become residents of the zoo. There are now over 800 animals housed on zoo grounds in Cuenca, where they teach visitors about the need to protect Ecaudor's flora, fauna and ecosystems. The zoo is run by a small number of dedicated individuals doing as much as they can with how little they have to promote a greater understanding of human-environmental conflicts, and how they can help conserve native species. They are a research (see the Center for Conservation of Amphibians at Amaru) and rescue facility teaching an appreciation of nature in a large metropolitan area, and your support helps them keep doing what they're doing better!

In October of 2013, we put together a Razoo (think Kickstarter) fundraiser to raise the initial funds for a desperately needed on-site veterinary facility. With $10,000 from that first venture, and financial support from the National Aviary in Pittsburgh, PA (see website and story here) Amaru built the basics of what, in summer of 2015, began functioning as the zoo's first clinic. 

You can see the beginnings of the clinic in this post and the pictures below. 


Bioparque Amaru Clinic, April 2014. 

Bioparque Amaru Clinic, May 2014. 

Bioparque Amaru Clinic, May 2014. 


Summer 2015: Two countries, two zoos, three vet schools, and two vets in the clinic

We made a lot of advancements towards better medical care for incoming and residential animals at Amaru in the clinic this summer, thanks to the support of the National Aviary and their head veterinarian, Dr.Pilar Fish. Bioparque Amaru Zoo is training and working with a Venezuelan veterinarian, Dr. Katherine Costa, with the hopes that she will stay on full-time at the zoo. Dr.Fish, with students Tim Beichner from Kansas State Veterinary School, Walker Roberts from University of Florida Veterinary School, Kira Hydock from Penn State Veterinary school, and myself, helped train and teach Dr.Katherine and the zookeepers at Amaru in the handling, care, and medical evaluation of many of the zoo’s animals during a multi-week visit in July of this year (blog entry to come!). 

We did most of our medicine this summer in the clinic’s first exam room, filled with donated medical supplies and drugs from our respective vet schools and the National Aviary. Amaru’s still got a long way to go before the clinic is fully functional, but water, electricity, a fridge and freezer for drugs and specimens, a microscope for diagnostics, and basic surgical and necropsy tools mean that for the first time, there’s an on-site hospital at the zoo. 

Check out how far it’s come in the last two years!


Amaru's first microscope! Tortoise abscess cytology, psittacine differentials, squirrel monkey fecals...it did it all!

Dr.Fish explaining  specialized husbandry for confiscated Galapagos tortoises to Dr.Katherine Costa of Venzuela.

Dr.Fish and Ernesto Arbelaez, director of the zoo, with National Aviary donations to the clinic. 

From left to right: Walker Roberts, Kira Hydock, me (Nikki!), Tim Beichner. Organizing clinic donation supplies!

With the nueva doctora in front of her clinic! 

Ernesto with the students over the teaching window built over the future surgical suite. 

Dr.Fish making reccomendations for future intensive care units, neonatal care rooms, and labs. 

A juvenile squirrel monkey slated for enrichment and socialization regimens to decrease its stress and normalize its behavior naturally, per Dr.Fish's recommendations. 

Visiting Amaru's Center for Conservation of Amphibians, with Dr.Fausto Sivichay, to discuss breeding programs, husbandry, and medicine for critically endangered Atelopus frogs. 
Translation services were needed! Here I am translating for Fausto to the rest of our group. 

Two Orange-winged Amazons in the newly constructed outdoor flight aviaries for recuperation of post-quarantine birds and permanently off-exhibit individuals. 

Kira Hydock helping with the husbandry of birds in post-quarantine holding. 

Walker Roberts preening a critically endangered Gray-cheeked parakeet, once an illegal pet, and now an Amaru resident. 

Dr.Katherine Costa with the juvenile squirrel monkey pictured earlier, preparing for a training and enrichment session. 

Necropsy of a once-thought-to-be-extinct Atelopus species that died of egg-binding. 


Much of the captive husbandry of the Atelopus species is still unknown. Research on their natural history is crucial for informing captive breeding and conservation programs like the ones at Amaru's CCA. 

Teaching pathology and necropsy of animals at Amaru is an important part of understanding mortalities in the zoo, and how to save other animals from the same fate. 

Teaching field medicine 

Triage of juvenile Barn Owls in the clinic. 

Blood draw setup for summer research on hemoparasites in psittacines and raptors. 


Dr.Fish orchestrating emergency protocols for the juvenile barn owls. 
Blood smears for complete blood count in psittacines and raptors. 

Monitoring weight on the zoo's new arrivals. 

Translating blood draw protocol for Ernesto and visiting vets from the environmental ministry.

Students giving fluids to a dehydrated Barn Owl. 

Squirrel monkey blood smear. 

The zoo clinic's first advanced diagnostic tool!

Dr.Fish helping brainstorm for the future of the clinic. 

Dr.Fish's drawings for future recuperation, rehab and quarantine areas in the clinic. 

Specialized enrichment item diagrams, also courtesy of Dr.Fish. 




The clinic, circa June 2015. 
June 2015

Outdoor flight aviaries for birds in holding off-exhibit, June 2015. 

Future veterinary teaching classroom above the surgery suite, June 2015. 

Ernesto's sister Vicky looking out over the flight aviaries and holding cages from the second floor of the clinic. 

A big thank you from Ernesto Arbelaez, director of Bioparque Amaru Zoo and president of the Ecuadorian Association of Zoos and Aquariums!!
Stay tuned for more updates on our activities this summer! I'll be putting up a post about our research project, ongoing Andean Condor research, and more details about Dr.Fish's visit soon.

If you’re interested in continuing to support Amaru’s efforts through tax-deductible donations via the National Aviary, we will be continuing our Aviary-Amaru internship program and directly supporting the zoo in the coming years. You can use the Aviary’s online donation system to donate to Amaru: choose the option donate to "Conservation and Field Research Department", and put "Ecuador," "Andean Condors," "Bioparque Amaru Zoo" or  how you would like to see the money used in the "In Honor Of" descriptor box.

Here is the link to the online donation system: https://www.aviary.org/Make-a-Donation

The Amaru animals appreciate it!

Cheers,
Nikki Becich
Tufts School of Veterinary Medicine, Class of 2018
National Aviary Field Associate and Bioparque Amaru Zoo Intern Program Facilitator