Jun
30

In Memoriam: Richard Montali

Richard J. Montali
January 17, 1939 – May 27, 2018

Richard J. (Dick) Montali, of Frederick, Maryland, died May 27, 2018, at Frederick Memorial Hospital. Born on January 17, 1939, in New London, Connecticut, he was the son of Americo Montali and Ann N. Carboni (neé Donahue). His great love of animals, especially horses, led him to pursue a pre-veterinary track at the University of Connecticut. He went on to graduate from Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine in 1964 and, after several years in practice, became a resident in comparative medicine and pathology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore. He found his career calling as Chief Veterinary Pathologist at the Smithsonian National Zoological Park in Washington D.C., becoming one of the first full-time zoo pathologists in the country.

Montali at microscope

Dr. Richard J. Montali

Considered to be one of the founders of modern investigative zoological pathology, Dr. Montali was responsible for countless contributions to the field of zoo and wildlife medicine during his 29-year career at the National Zoo and afterward. He made a profound impact on the advancement of animal care sciences and authored hundreds of papers and publications with significant implications for zoological medicine. His areas of research were vast and extensive, with particular focuses on the infectious diseases of carnivores, including red pandas, giant pandas, new world primates, and ungulates (especially elephants and black rhinoceros).

Those who knew him personally can attest to his influence and contributions around the globe. He provided residency training for numerous veterinarians, for whom he was a great mentor and leader. He worked closely with the Department of Veterinary Pathology at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, providing training for residents in the National Zoo’s diagnostic and research pathology program. He received multiple awards for his work, including the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians’ Emily P. Dolensek Award, the American College of Veterinary Pathologists’ Distinguished Member Award and the American College of Zoological Medicine’s Murray Fowler Lifetime Achievement Award.

Dr. Montali is survived by his son Michael J. Montali of San Francisco; his daughter Natalie Montali Crow, grandson Leo Crow, and son-in-law Barney Crow of Los Angeles; and his sister, Sally Carboni of New London. Friends Patricia Lasko and Tom McCabe regularly cared for him during his last years.

 

 


Posted: 30 June 2018
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