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Allie always loved the outdoors. She remembers playing outside as a child in the Midwest, digging for worms with her brother. In middle school, biology really made sense to her. At the time, it seemed like science had no gray areas; all you had to do was conduct an experiment and prove your hypothesis right or wrong. Throughout both middle and high school, Allie had tremendous science teachers who pushed and taught her to continually ask questions. At Colorado State University, Allie’s professors and advisors were incredibly helpful, and she has continued to keep in touch with them to ask questions and to seek advice throughout her professional career.

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Allie’s many internships with the National Park Service (NPS) paid off, and in 2019 she started her federal career working for the Wildlife Health Branch of the Biological Resources Division. She recognized that some of her coworkers had been working there for more than twenty years, but that didn’t stop her from asking questions. As one of the younger people in the field, Allie came into the organization with fresh eyes. She looked throughout her department and found ways to help reorganize and get information to and from parks across the country. She is an administrative assistant for the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) where she oversees communication and records that are associated with animal research projects across the NPS. Among many other important things, the NPS provides review oversight for the humane care and use of wild, vertebrate animals in research, teaching, and training in parks. IACUC also coordinates the veterinary diagnostic service where staff in parks can contact our team of veterinarians to submit samples for wildlife disease surveillance and/or investigation. After four years, she is still helping to improve communication between parks, and she is still asking questions.

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Allie was “empowered by badass women,” and she hopes that every woman can go on and be a badass in their own way. Through her work, she reminds people that everything we do affects our ecosystem. Humans and wildlife are connected. People should be kind to wildlife and kind to people. She says be sure to “leave no trace,” when you visit a park. “We are all in this together, and it is important for all of us to keep our ecosystems clean.” She is an amazing young woman, and she is making a real difference. Allie Petersen is the definition of a badass.