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Anas penelope
Smient, Pfeifente, Canard siffleur
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Consultation on mainstreaming of One Health capacity building in India organized by Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) at India Habitat Centre (IHC) on 22 July 2016 (photo credit: PHFI)
Jimmy Smith (4th from right), ILRI director general attends the launch of One Health field site in Phu Binh District, Thai Nguyen Province, Vietnam (photo credit: ILRI/Vu Ngoc Dung).
One Health Briefs - The One Health challenge and opportunity.
whylivestockmatter.org/livestock-pathways-2030-one-health
Created by Annabel Slater a.slater@cgiar.org 2021.
Uploaded by Annabel Slater.
Riley and a veterinarian with the Mongolian Army examines a sheep during a hands-on classroom exam in northeastern Mongolia near the Russian border. Riley is in Mongolia working with its Army and Border Forces teaching and promoting veterinarian and Public Health best practices.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
A couple of workers work in a meat processing plant making sausage in the capital city of Ulaanbaatar.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
Ram Pratim Deka, ILRI's scientist, presenting the gap in coordination between human and animal brucellosis research (photo credit: ILRI/Roma Oli).
Lt. Col. Douglas Riley, a 13th AF/SGK international health specialist, and a veterinarian with the Mongolian Border Forces examines a sheep during a hands-on classroom exam in northeastern Mongolia near the Russian border. Riley is in Mongolia working with its Army and Border Forces teaching and promoting veterinarian and Public Health best practices.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy
T. Lock)
On 2 July 2020, human and animal health experts from the partnership and Thai Nguyen met to review the progress and achievements of the One Health research work at the field site (photo credit: ILRI/Chi Nguyen).
A veterinarian with the Mongolian Army examines a sheep during a hands on class room exam in north eastern Mongolia near the Russian border. Riley is in Mongolia working with its Army and Border Forces teaching and promoting veterinarian and Public Health best practices.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
Participants visit a poultry farm in Phu Binh District, Thai Nguyen Province, Vietnam (photo credit: ILRI/Vu Ngoc Dung).
Wilson Mbaya, carries a cool box containing blood samples collected in the field in Isiolo County, Kenya. This is part of a cross-sectional study to determine the prevalence of brucellosis, Q fever and Rift Valley fever (photo credit: ILRI/Geoffrey Njenga).
Veterinarians with the Mongolian Border Forces tries to coral a horse for a pregnancy check in northeastern Mongolia near the Russian border. A small harmless rope is tied around the horse's nose to help control the animal. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
A Mongolian herder carries a leg of sheep to the cooking fire after butchering it. The herders use almost 100 percent of the animal they slaughter and eat meat at just about every meal of the day. They sustain their lives directly from the products of domesticated animals such as cattle, horses, camels, yaks, sheep, and goats, and sometimes game. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
Secretary Russell Redding of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture gives final remarks at the reception.
Herders live in a traditional Mongolian dwelling called a Ger. It is suited for the harsh terrain and lifestyle the herders live. The Ger is a round felt tent covered in durable, waterproof, white canvas and is designed to be able to pack up and move. Its round shape keeps the Ger resilient to Mongolia 's ferocious winds, while its felt is rapidly drying material for when it rains or snow melts. In Ulaanbaatar and towns across the country, people are setting into large, faceless apartment blocks. Ger districts usually occupy poor quality land on the outskirts of town. But in summer, urban Mongolians head to the outskirts where they spend as much time as possible in small wooden houses or gers where they can enjoy the beautiful Mongolian summers away from the uncomfortably hot urban apartments. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
Lt. Col. Douglas Riley, a 13th AF/SGK international health specialist, takes time to compile and look over his notes for the day in northeastern Mongolia near the Russian border. Riley just finished a hands-on class in examining sheep and goats and basic medical procedures with the Mongolian Border Forces. He is in Mongolia working with its Army and Border Forces teaching and promoting veterinarian and Public Health best practices.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy
T. Lock)
Lt. Col. Douglas Riley, a 13th AF/SGK international health specialist, and a veterinarian with the Mongolian Border Forces conducts a pregnancy check on a cow in northeastern Mongolia near the Russian border. By performing these routine checks it allows the herders to better track and care for their animals.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
A Mongolian Border Forces soldier sits inside a Ger for lunch after a morning class on small animal surgery procedures. Lt. Col. Douglas Riley, a 13th AF/SGK international health specialist, is in Mongolia working with its Army and Border Forces teaching and promoting veterinarian and Public Health best practices.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
Riley and veterinarians with the Mongolian non-profit Vet Tech finish carrying an injured sheep so they can keep it isolated from the herd while it is being treated. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
CGIAR Initiative on One Health Ethiopia stakeholder workshop,
ILRI Addis Ababa Campus, 26 April 2023 (Photo credit: ILRI/Apollo Habtamu)
13th AF/SGK International Health Specialist Lt. Col. Douglas Riley and a veterinarian with the Mongolian Border Forces try to coral a sheep for a hands-on class room exam in northeastern Mongolia near the Russian border. Riley is in Mongolia working with its Army and Border Forces teaching and promoting veterinarian and Public Health best practices.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
Mongolian veterinarian Border Forces perform a routine surgery on a sheep for practice after completeing a class on small animal surgery procedures. Riley is in Mongolia working with its Army and Border Forces teaching and promoting veterinarian and Public Health best practices.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy
T. Lock)
A young boy herding goats looking for pasture in Isiolo County, Kenya (photo credit: ILRI/Geoffrey).
The One Health Partnership for Zoonoses (OHP), an initiative by the Vietnamese government and supported by 27 national and international agencies, was officially launched in Hanoi, Vietnam on 1 March 2016 (photo credit: ILRI/Hung Nguyen).
A flock of sheep cross a road in northeastern Mongolia. Mongolia is the land of livestock with more than 30 million livestock, including 13.8 million sheep, 10.2 million goats, 3.1 million cattle, 2.6 million horses and 322,300 Bactrian camels. The livestock is permanently threatened by the fragile condition of pastureland, severe winters and endemic animal diseases. To cope in the short term, herders at the subsistence level may have to sell animals. With fewer animals they find it even harder to survive. Herders are among the poorest of the poor in Mongolia.
(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy
T. Lock)
A couple of Mongolian Border Forces on horseback try to wrangle a cow for a pregnancy check in northeastern Mongolia on the Russian border.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
One Health Brief no. 5
Keeping livestock healthy and well cared for improves animal, human, environmental and economic health.
whylivestockmatter.org/livestock-pathways-2030-one-health...
Created by Annabel Slater a.slater@cgiar.org 2021.
Uploaded by Annabel Slater.
Wilson Mbaya, takes a blood sample from a sheep in Isiolo County, Kenya. This is part of a cross-sectional study to determine the prevalence of brucellosis, Q fever and Rift Valley fever in the county (photo credit: ILRI/Geoffrey Njenga).
A couple of Mongolian Army soldiers carry in a full milk can after the afternoon milking. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
A couple of Mongolian Border Forces cut and prepare some mutton for lunch. Mongolians' diet relies heavily on meat and dairy products, The meat-dependent diet arises from the need for hearty food to stave off the cold and long winters.(U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
The inaugural workshop of a biosurveillance project on Rift Valley fever, brucellosis and Q fever in Kenya was held in Nairobi 3 Sept 2019 (photo credit: ILRI/Paul Karaimu).
CGIAR One Health initiative annual planning meeting April 24–26, 2023 (Photo credit: ILRI/Apollo Habtamu) Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
The One Health Partnership for Zoonoses (OHP), an initiative by the Vietnamese government, was officially launched in Hanoi, Vietnam on 1 March 2016 (photo credit: ILRI/Hung Nguyen).
A Mongolian herder prepares her milk for sale on a street corner in Ulaanbaatar. The herders bring in their fresh milk from the countryside and break it up into smaller bottles or plastic bags to sell. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
A Mongolian herder milks her cows in the late afternoon. Herders generally conduct two milking sessions a day, early morning and late afternoon. (U.S. Air Force photo/Master Sgt. Jeremy T. Lock)
One Health Brief no. 7
Women’s empowerment leads to healthier people, animals and environments.
whylivestockmatter.org/livestock-pathways-2030-one-health...
Created by Annabel Slater a.slater@cgiar.org 2021.
Uploaded by Annabel Slater.
On 9 September 2013, Sinh Dang Xuan successfully defended his Master of Veterinary Public Health thesis at the Veterinary Public Health Centre for Asia Pacific, Chiang Mai University, Thailand. His research study was co-funded by the ILRI-led project "Ecosystem approaches to the better management of zoonotic emerging infectious diseases in Southeast Asia" (photo credit: ILRI/Fred Unger).
One Health Brief no. 7
Women’s empowerment leads to healthier people, animals and environments.
whylivestockmatter.org/livestock-pathways-2030-one-health...
Created by Annabel Slater a.slater@cgiar.org 2021.
Uploaded by Annabel Slater.