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October 27, 2022

Saint Louis Zoo Awarded World Association Zoos and Aquariums Conservation Award

The World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA) has awarded the Saint Louis Zoo WildCare Institute the WAZA conservation award for the Center for Avian Health in the Galápagos Islands.

Oct. 27, 2022

The Saint Louis Zoo is Awarded Worldwide Conservation Award

The World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA) has awarded the Saint Louis Zoo WildCare Institute the WAZA conservation award for the Center for Avian Health in the Galápagos Islands.

The Center for Avian Health in the Galápagos Islands

The Center for Avian Health in the Galápagos Islands started 20 years ago as a collaboration between the Saint Louis Zoo WildCare Institute, the Veterinary Health Department at the Zoo and the University of Missouri-St. Louis Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center. The Center studies the health of the unique birds in the Galápagos, working to understand and mitigate disease threats to prevent their extinction. The Center also trains Ecuadorian scientists and rangers to recognize and test for diseases. The relatively sheltered Pacific environment that protects these birds also makes them immunologically naïve and vulnerable to introduced pathogens. This requires ongoing surveillance and testing consistently. Based on these efforts, only one species has gone extinct since our partnership began thanks to the hard work of our partners — the Charles Darwin Foundation and the Galápagos National Park. Our partners have worked together to help recognize the risk and have established an "early warning system" based on long-term disease monitoring of Galápagos birds to prevent the spread of avian diseases.

See blog story from UMSL.

Ron and Karen Goellner Center for Hellbender Conservation

Two other finalists were considered for the 2022 Conservation Award: North Carolina Zoo's UNITE project and our very own Ron and Karen Goellner Center for Hellbender Conservation. The Ron and Karen Goellner Center for Hellbender Conservation works with the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) to breed Ozark and eastern hellbenders in human care. The decade-long collaboration between the MDC and the Zoo has yielded thousands of baby hellbenders and over 10,000 hellbenders have been released into rivers around Missouri.

About the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums

WAZA is the global alliance of regional associations, national federations, zoos and aquariums. They are dedicated to the care and conservation of animals and their habitats around the world. The membership consists of nearly 400 leading institutions and organizations around the world, and this number continues to grow. Since 1935, the goal of WAZA has been to guide, encourage and support the zoos, aquariums and like‑minded organizations of the world in animal care and welfare, environmental education and global conservation.

The WAZA Conservation award was first granted in 2016. The award is granted to an institution in the WAZA network for its outstanding, comprehensive conservation program with clear goals and excellent conservation outcomes.

News Category

  • Michael Macek, Dr. Lisa Kelly, Dwight Scott

  • Cormorant in the Galapagos

  • Galapagos sunset