Vanessa Olivia Ezenwa | |
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Alma mater | Princeton University Rice University |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | United States Geological Survey Odum School of Ecology Yale University |
Thesis | Behavioral and nutritional ecology of gastrointestinal parasitism in African bovids (2002) |
Vanessa Olivia Ezenwa is an American ecologist, and is a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale University. Her research considers the ecology of infectious diseases amongst animal populations. In 2020, she was selected by The Community of Scholars as one of the most Inspiring Black scientists in the United States.
As a high school student, Ezenwa became interested in infectious diseases and ecology.[1] Ezenwa earned her bachelor's degree at Rice University. She was a graduate student at Princeton University, where she majored in behavioral ecology.[2][3] Her doctoral research considered eleven different species of African ungulate in Kenya.[1] Some of these ungulates lived in pairs, whilst some lived in groups of one hundred.[1] After completing her doctorate, Ezenwa joined the United States Geological Survey as a postdoctoral fellow.[4]
In 2005, Ezenwa joined the faculty at the University of Montana.[citation needed] She moved to the University of Georgia in 2010.[citation needed] Her research considers infectious diseases in animal populations, with a particular focus on identifying effective intervention strategies. She has studied how gastrointestinal worm infections impact the susceptibility of African buffalo to contract bovine tuberculosis, and how severe their diseases are once they have become infected. She concentrated her studies on the free ranging buffalo of Kruger National Park, but the buffalo are a major reservoir of bovine tuberculosis infections in South Africa. The prevalence of the disease in Africa can impact other wildlife. Ezenwa demonstrated that it was possible to treat the worms, diminishing the severity of tuberculosis and increasing the likelihood infected animals survive. Unfortunately, because infected animals survive better, they are more likely to spread the disease.[5] Ezenwa has investigated non-pharmaceutical approaches to managing infectious diseases amongst animals, such as test and cull programmes.[5] Beyond African buffalo, Ezenwa studied Grant's gazelle and spiny mice.[6] Ezenwa has investigated the influence of climate change and changing weather on infectious diseases amongst livestock.[7]
Ezenwa serves on the editorial advisory board of Science.[8] In 2020, Ezenwa was selected by The Community of Scholars as one of the most inspiring Black scientists in the United States.[9]