Name:     Diella Koberstein Profession:   Research Assistant
Relationship: Country:     United States of America
2001 University of Washington List of Employees, Job Title and Salary

January 25, 2001 Personnel Detail

360 University of Washington

Name Job Title Salary(monthly or hourly)

KOBERSTEIN, DIELLA R. RES TECH 1 2270


Laboratory Primate Newsletter

VOLUME 45 NUMBER 1 JANUARY 2006

Primate Treat Recipe Cookbook Available in pdf

The Catarrhine Cafe Cookbook, compiled by Rita Bellanca and Diella Koberstein, includes “Tricks of the Trade”, recipes, and examples of enrichment items. A pdf version of this resource is available at <www.wanprc.org/wanprc/cookbook-forExternal.pdf>, part of the Website of the Psychological Well-being Program of the Washington NPRC: <www.wanprc.org/wanprc/psych-wellbeing.htm>.


Diella Koberstein

      Merchandising Manager, Food & Wine Magazine
      Greater New York City Area
      Current Merchandising Manager at Food & Wine Magazine
      Past Associate Merchandising Manager at Food & Wine Magazine
      Education University of Washington
      French Culinary Institute
      Connections 25 connections Industry Publishing

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      Diella Koberstein’s Experience
      Merchandising Manager
      Food & Wine Magazine
      (Publishing industry)
      March 2007 — Present (7 months)
      Associate Merchandising Manager
      Food & Wine Magazine
      (Publishing industry)
      February 2006 — March 2007 (1 year 2 months)

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Diella Koberstein’s Education

      University of Washington
      1996 — 2000
      French Culinary Institute


J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci. 2006 May ;45 (3):27-32 16642967

Successful Introduction of Macaca nemestrina Infants to Their Mothers after Cesarean Delivery.

[My paper] Rita U Bellanca , Diella R Koberstein , Patrick J Delio , Stephen T Kelley , Carolyn M Crockett

Four Macaca nemestrina infants delivered via cesarean section were introduced to their mothers after surgery. All 4 introductions were successful, although methods differed slightly between dam-infant pairs. Pairs were considered successful when the mother displayed affiliative behavior towards the infant (including grooming), cradled it ventrally, and nursed it sufficiently to maintain infant health. The dams were sedated lightly with ketamine prior to introduction to reduce the possibility of aggression to caregivers and infants. The dams were checked for lactation, and each infant was swabbed with its placenta and with its mother's vaginal secretions prior to placement in the dam's cage. During the initial exposure, all 4 mothers picked up their infants within 1.5 h after introduction. Three of the 4 dam-infant pairs were fully successful during the initial exposure (24 h postdelivery), that is, the infants began to nurse within 2.5 h of affiliative contact. The 4th dam-infant pair required 3 d of successive exposures before the infant was nursed adequately. Infant health and maternal behavior determined the length of exposure. The optimal duration of these introductory encounters appeared to be between 2 and 3.5 h, to allow sufficient time for the dam's recovery from sedation while avoiding adverse effects on infant health. These observations demonstrate that cesarean-delivered M. nemestrina infants can be successfully united with their mothers, although it sometimes may require prolonged exposures on successive days.


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Diella Koberstein

Location: Greater New York City Area 
Industry: Publishing 
Current 
  Merchandising Manager at Food & Wine Magazine 
Past 
  Associate Merchandising Manager at Food & Wine Magazine 
Education 
  University of Washington 
  French Culinary Institute