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ZSL's
Mission Statement
To achieve and promote the
worldwide conservation of animals and their
habitats.
ZSL pursues this mission by:
·
keeping and
presenting animals at London Zoo and Whipsnade Wild Animal Park in
accordance with best practice;
·
giving priority
to species that are threatened in the wild;
·
increasing
public understanding of animals and their welfare and of the issues
involved in their conservation;
·
maintaining an
outstanding education and information programme,
particularly for schoolchildren and
families;
·
undertaking
field conservation programmes, both in Britain and abroad;
·
developing its
role as a leading centre for research and conservation
biology and animal welfare;
·
fulfilling its
role as a learned society and force for zoology and animal
conservation through publications, scientific meetings, lectures, the
award of prizes for outstanding achievement and the promotion of
conservation
policy.
Our scientists in the laboratory
and the field, animal management teams at both zoos and our
veterinarians contribute wide-ranging skills and experience to both
practical conservation and to the scientific research that underpins
this work.
The charity is made up of five operating divisions:
- London Zoo;
- Whipsnade Wild Animal Park;
- Institute of Zoology & Scientific
Publications Department;
- Conservation Programmes;
- Library & Fellowship
Services.
The
Institute of Zoology - Science for conservation
http://www.zoo.cam.ac.uk/ioz/index.htm
The Institute of Zoology (IoZ) is the research division of the
Zoological Society of London (ZSL). It is a government-funded research
institute specialising in scientific issues relevant to the
conservation of animal species and their habitats. The Institute
is based at ZSL's Regents Park site, London.
Our core funding comes from the Higher Education Funding Council
for England, the same body that supports universities.
Additional research funding for specific projects comes from UK
research councils (e.g. NERC, BBSRC, EPSRC) and research charities
(e.g. Wellcome and Leverhume trusts), as in university departments.
Since the late 1980s the IoZ has been affiliated to the University
of London, but in 2000 this arrangement was replaced with an important
new strategic partnership with the University of Cambridge. The
background to this change lies in our shared interest in researching
scientific issues that underpin decisions affecting biodiversity
conservation.
The new partnership highlighted the need for us to focus our
research onto key areas. We identified these through considering the
new partnership with Cambridge, our links with conservation programmes
in London and Cambridge, and animal-related conservation projects in
the rest of ZSL. We aim to exploit our unusual status as an academic
research body embedded within a conservation charity, but linked to
the University of Cambridge.
The seven thematic areas on which we will focus our research in the
next few years span evolutionary biology, genetics, ecology,
reproductive biology, wildlife epidemiology, and animal
health/welfare. A senior research fellow in the Institute leads each
one of these, but staff are not restricted to working within any one
theme. Our scientific research and training programmes are outlined on
this site and in our annual scientific report.
Conservation
Programmes - ZSL
in the field
ZSL staff
work closely with local communities in other countries, providing the
skills and resouces needed to protect and manage indigenous wildlife.
Our aim is to achieve practical
conservation objectives in the field, while training and involving
local people.
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