There are several options. The most common is, you would be working for another veterinarian who owned the clinic you worked at. Alternatively, you could be self-employed as the owner of your own clinic. Otherwise, veterinarians work in a variety of industries and government, at which point they work for whomever signs their paychecks (Federal government, private industry, military, NGO, consultant, etc.).
Yes, a misdemeanor would not keep you from working as a veterinarian.
A good career working with animals would be a zoologist, a zookeeper, or any kind of profession that has to do with the care of animals (veterinarian).
The average annual salary for a veterinarian in the United States is ~$90,000; a veterinarian working in Arkansas would probably be on the lower end of this with experience, a good clinic and an established client base.
No - a veterinarian is a veterinarian regardless of the school they trained at. The pay rate is mostly dependent upon the type of practice, the experience and competence of the veterinarian and the geographic location where the veterinarian is working at.
Depends on the policy of the individual surgery.
An associate DVM is a veterinarian who is working as a salaried employee at a particular clinic. This is in contrast to a partner or owner DVM, who in addition to working as a veterinarian at the clinic are also part or full owners of the clinic.
The average salary can fluctuate depending on specialization and the type of facility in which the veterinarian is working. However, in most cases a first year veterinarian can expect to make $60,000.
A doctor that treats animals is called a veterinarian.
The most common option for you would be of course be a veterinarian. Other options for you could be working at a zoo or animal rights organization.
An avian veterinarian is a trained veterinarian who has specialized in treating birds. In some cases, an avian veterinarian will be board certified in avian medicine, but most veterinarians working with birds have simply taken additional training and have self-studied avian medicine.
dogs and cats are the main ones but if you are an advanced veterinarian you could do horses and cows. Possibly birds and rabbits.
This is highly variable depending on the contract the veterinarian negotiated and the type of practice the veterinarian is working in. Some clinics will ofter paid maternity and paternity leave while other clinics will just allow the veterinarian to take unpaid time off for childbirth.