While diseases among wildlife are anything but new, they continue to evolve and require close monitoring to protect stable ecosystems, and ensure vulnerable species that have been already pushed to the brink of extinction due to human activities are not lost.
All wildlife diseases, all one health, all conservation, all the time.
Submitted Projects
0
Total Funding
$1,500
Submission Deadline
May 10, 2019
In partnership with Experiment, the Wildlife Disease Association is calling for research proposals in the area of wildlife health and disease. In 2018, this grant challenge produced 11 funded research projects and raised over $55,000 for wildlife disease research.
The call is open to all wildlife disease researchers worldwide. The Wildlife Disease Association is particularly interested in work on the following diseases:
Experiment is the largest crowdfunding platform for scientific research with a funding success rate of 44%. Experiment's mission is to democratize the research process and remove barriers to scientific success often faced by young or early-career researchers. The average budget of a successful proposal is $4,000. This funding mechanism is commonly used by graduate students paired with a faculty member, but is not required.
The call for proposal will last for 31 days from April 10, 2019 until May 10, 2019. Proposals should be submitted directly on the Experiment site at experiment.com/grants/WDA2019.
Proposals submitted for the call will be approved or rejected by May 17th and launched on June 1st for a 30 day campaign. Projects will be promoted by Experiment, WDA and allied organizations. Researchers should expect to spend time weekly during the campaign working outreach. Past experience shows that projects whose proponents and research team mount a strong outreach campaign are most successful.
During the 30 day campaign participants will be expected to share the projects with their networks.
WDA will sponsor 7 prizes.
$1,000 will be awarded to the project with the most number of donors on the 21st day of the campaigns. $500 will be awarded to the project with the second most number of donors on the 21st day (June 24th). Five additional $100 prizes will be awarded to the top 4 crowd supported proposals whose author(s) are WDA members on the 30th day of the campaign (July 3rd).
Previously funded wildlife disease projects:
Why are some bats naturally immune to White-nose Syndrome?
Can we stop amphibian extinction by increasing immunity to the frog chytrid fungus?
Do birds carry Lyme disease?
Development of non-invasive diagnostics for endotheliotropic herpesvirus in free-ranging Asian elephants
Assessing the pathogens of wild mammals in Los Angeles County
Can DNA collected from pond water help save frogs?
Are Costa Rican salamanders susceptible to Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans?
Probiotics for wild boreal toads facing a deadly fungal disease
Is habitat quality a key factor in determining whether koalas develop chlamydial disease?
Do Pacific Northwest marine mammals carry antibiotic-resistant bacteria from land animals?
Do zoonotic pathogens exist in Fijian bats and if so what are the risks of exposure to humans?
Creating a refuge from amphibian chytrid fungus for the critically endangered mountain chicken
Dead wombats walking: Seasonal nutrition and mange in free-ranging bare-nosed wombats
Ticks and tick-borne pathogens of the Mojave Desert Tortoise
About Wildlife Disease Association:
In March 1951, a group of 28 U.S. and Canadian scientists interested in wildlife diseases founded the Wildlife Disease Committee, which became the Wildlife Disease Association (WDA), a 501 non-profit organization. The mission of WDA is to acquire, disseminate, and apply knowledge of the health and diseases of wild animals in relation to their biology, conservation, and interactions with humans and domestic animals.