WildView™
An Eye on Wildlife
Wildlife Conservation Society Menusearch for stories
- Browse Categories
- Art and Nature
- Assignments
- Bronx Zoo
- Crustaceans
- Education
- Environment
- Guanaco
- Herping from Home
- Horticulture
- In Memoriam
- New York Aquarium
- People
- Seasons
- Technology
- Throwback Thursday
- WCS 125th Anniversary
- WCS Chronicles
- Wild Places
- Wildlife
- Amphibians
- Antelope
- Arachnid
- Bats
- Bears
- Big Cats
- Birds
- Birds of Prey
- Bison
- Bovine
- Buffalo
- Canids, Dogs, Wolves
- Caribou
- Carnivores
- Cats
- Deer
- Dolphins
- Elephants
- Elk
- Endangered
- Fish
- Fox
- Giraffe
- Giraffes
- Great Apes
- Have No Fear
- Hippos
- Horses
- Insects
- Invertebrates
- Jellies
- Lemurs
- Mammals
- Marine Life
- Marsupials
- Mice and Rats
- Mongoose
- Monkeys
- Moose
- Muskoxen
- Ocean Giants
- Okapi
- Otters
- Pangolins
- Pigs
- Primates
- Rabbits, Hares, Pikas
- Rays
- Red Pandas
- Reptiles
- Rhinos
- Rodents
- Seals and Sea Lions
- Sharks
- Sheep and Goats
- Tapir
- Ungulates
- Walruses
- Wildlife
- Zebra
- Wildlife Health
subscribe
Sarah Rashed
Wildlife Conservation Society
Sarah graduated with a bachelor’s degree in Marine Biology and joined the WCS’s New York Aquarium as a volunteer in December of 2018. Shortly after, she became a seasonal staff member narrating the Sea Lion Celebration shows and helping with the Sea Lion Encounter program. After spending a year as a marine mammal trainer in Miami, she found her way back to the New York Aquarium as a marine mammal trainer for the Behavioral Husbandry Department.