 
        Dr  
        David  
        Oyebamiji  
        
        Dr  
        David  
        Oyebamiji  
        Academic  
        University of ibadan  
Biography
        Creative thinker who has the ability to draw on his own experience and observations to develop thoughtful opinions on a variety of issues. As a lecturer at Nigeria's first university, he enjoys a great rapport with undergraduate and postgraduates’ students, colleagues, and administrators. Experienced lecturer, motivational trainer, and dedicated researcher who has a talent for identifying and encouraging growth in individuals for actualization of dreams and on their bid to appropriately understand the epidemiology and control of tropical parasitic diseases in the course of their research programmes. Has completed a Master’s and Doctoral degree in Zoology (Parasitology). I have published a few papers in many peer review journals as an early researcher.  Research interests
        Animal Parasitology, Parasite Ecology, Helminthology, Vaccinology,  Parasitic Diseases, Parasite Biology, Molecular Parasitology, Tropical Diseases, Tropical Veterinary diseases, Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Schistosomiasis, Trypanosomiasis, Molecular Diagnostics, Emerging Infectious Diseases, Infectious Disease Control and Prevention, Parasites, Nematode Parasites, Soil Analysis, Zoonotic Diseases  Projects you're working on
        Molecular characterization of Chicken lice and domesticated ruminants Cattle, goats, and sheep) parasites in order to pave way for development of their vaccines.  Discipline
        Epidemiology      Parasitology  Host species
        Cats      Cattle      Dogs      Pigs      Poultry      Small ruminants      Wildlife      Zoonoses  Pathogen
        Parasites      Parasites›Cestodes      Parasites›Eimeria      Parasites›Nematodes      Parasites›Taenia solium      Parasites›Theileria annulata      Parasites›Theileria parva      Parasites›Ticks      Parasites›Trypanosoma      Viruses›African swine fever virus      Viruses›Porcine circovirus