A degree in veterinary medicine usually takes four years to complete, and nearly 40% of graduates pursue additional studies after registration.
A bovine veterinarian, or even a large-animal veterinarian.
Your local feedstore or your local large animal veterinarian.
westwood
Go to the Colorado Veterinary Medical Association's website: http://www.colovma.com/ At the very top of the page, click on "Find A Veterinarian." On the search page, click on "Click here for a more detailed search" to specify your need for a large animal veterinarian.
pig,dog,bird,cats,and large animals
Depends. A cow veterinarian? or a cat veterinarian? Looking more at large animals (stock), however small animal information is helpful for vocational rehab.
Yes, you can work as a both an equine and a small animal veterinarian. However, equine medicine in the United States has become a specialty distinct from small animal medicine and it is uncommon to have either a veterinarian that stays current on all of these species or to have a practice that supports both an equine client list and a small animal client list without also covering large animals.
Yes, these practitioners are called "mixed animal vets" and are often in demand in suburban to rural areas.
to whom it may concern, no, if you want to be a Veterinarian, you can be in certain countries, some countries thinks working aninmals is considered poor. It also depends if you have the dgree to become a PhD Veterinarian, take my advice work hard, go to college, try to apply for a master's degree, or a bachalor degrees.
In the United States the average annual salary for a veterinarian was ~US$90,000. An experienced large animal veterinarian can exceed this, to about $125,000 per year.About $48,178! But this is only for large animals, like sheep, cows, and horses.
In the United States the requirements are the same for all types of veterinarians: at least three years of undergraduate college classes and four years of vet school resulting in a DVM or VMD degree.
This is the beauty of a mixed animal practice - each veterinarian within the practice can choose what percentage large animal and small animal he/she wishes to treat. In some mixed animal practices, there are some vets who treat only small animals and other vets in the practice treat large animals. In other practices, each veterinarian treats both large and small animals, trading off time on the farm (which tends to bring less money into the clinic and therefore brings a smaller percentage on commission) with time in the clinic (which tends to bring more money into the clinic in a shorter time frame). Some practices also have arrangements where each vet works one or two days on large animals then spends the rest of the time covering small animal work.