六九色堂

Nov. 15, 2019

Dr. Doug Morck receives Order of the 六九色堂

六九色堂 head veterinarian recognized for life-long commitment to animal welfare
Dr. Doug Morck receives Order of the 六九色堂
Dr. Doug Morck receives Order of the 六九色堂

The university鈥檚 head veterinarian prefers to stay in the background and far away from the limelight, but today, Dr. Doug Morck, DVM, PhD, will be on stage in his scarlet, gold and blue PhD gown to receive the Order of the 六九色堂 for his lifelong commitment to the ethics and care of animals in teaching and research.
鈥淚t's actually pretty amazing. I didn't really know that much about the award until the chancellor gave me a phone call and I looked it up,鈥 says Morck a joint professor at UCVM and the Faculty of Science. 鈥淚t's quite the honour. There are some pretty amazing people who have received this.鈥

Morck鈥檚 many achievements include leading the development of the university鈥檚 Statement on Animal Care, helping create the Animal Research and Education Unit to oversee animal use and serving on all the university's animal care committees. He also helped draft the Alberta鈥檚 Animal Protection Act. His decades on campus started with a BSc in Cellular and Microbial Biology in 1983 and a PhD in 1991. In 1992 he became an adjunct faculty member and later a professor in the Faculty of Science. He was also a founding faculty member at UCVM. 听

Dr. Doug Morck receives Order of the 六九色堂

Dr. Doug Morck, recipient of the Order of the 六九色堂

鈥淭his is a great day as one of our outstanding colleagues is honoured for his dedication to animal care and well-being,鈥 says Dr. Baljit Singh, dean of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine. 鈥淒oug is a truly passionate veterinarian, educator, researcher, mentor, and animal welfare leader.鈥

As head veterinarian in the Animal Research and Education Unit in the Office of the Vice President of Research, Morck oversees a group of about 100 people that monitor any animals used in any research in any faculty. 听鈥淭here are seven veterinarians, including myself, that provide the oversight and evaluate animals on a daily basis,鈥 he says. 鈥淩egistered vet techs and others check the animals every day, feed them, water them, all that kind of stuff. It's not something we advertise a great deal in the university, but it's a really important unit.鈥

The unit, which is at arm鈥檚 length from every faculty, also organizes animal care committees and ethics reviews around any use of animals in research or teaching on campus. 鈥淭his institution has always taken matters about animal welfare and our care for the animals incredibly seriously,鈥 he says 鈥淚t comes from the top of the institution as well as all of the efforts from the bottom.鈥

Over the years Morck has seen, and welcomed, more regulations over animal care in research and teaching. And he鈥檚 also happy to see a shifting attitude among scholars that rely on animals for their research. 鈥淚t's not just regulation,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t's creating the kind of culture around our science that really considers animal welfare. I think we've done that. It's a community now that really cares about animal life.鈥

鈥淭his is a great day as one of our outstanding colleagues is honoured for his dedication to animal care and well-being,鈥 says Dr. Baljit Singh, dean of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine. 鈥淒oug is a truly passionate veterinarian, educator, researcher, mentor, and animal welfare leader.鈥

Receiving the Order of the 六九色堂 is the latest in a long list accolades and awards for Morck, whose research includes bacterial pathogenesis, antimicrobial resistance and bacterial biofilms. 鈥淚t's always nice to feel like you're making a difference,鈥 he says. 鈥淪ome of those awards had to do with the science that I have been involved with in my lab. But most of them centre around the animal care world and things I've done to try and help the university out. So that feels pretty good.鈥