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The Martha Acosta A.C. Foundation informs that, as a result of an internal call aimed at its student community, in which more than 50 scholarship holders participated, the two representatives who will attend the AASV Annual Meeting 2026, one of the most relevant international meetings in the pork sector, have been selected. The students selected to attend this important event are Arleth Michelle Ortega Flores from Centro Universitario de Ciencias  Biologicas y Agropecuarias (CUCBA) and Antonio Heriberto Ramírez Ramírez from the Centro Universitario Del Sur (CUSur) both of the University of Guadalajara, who will represent the Foundation at this global forum for professional development, networking, and training.

The AASV Annual Meeting 2026 will be held from February 28 to March 3, 2026, at the Paris Las Vegas Hotel, in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States, and will bring together veterinarians, specialists, academics, researchers, and leaders of the swine industry from around the world. The program includes scientific conferences, technical sessions, academic activities, and professional exchange spaces focused on the main challenges and advances in the sector.

Student participation in this type of international event represents a strategic opportunity to strengthen their academic training, broaden their professional vision, and bring them closer to the trends, technologies, and approaches that are setting the course for swine farming worldwide

The Martha Acosta A.C. Foundation would like to express its special thanks to AASV Foundation (American Association of Swine Veterinarians Foundation), for its support and collaboration, which enable our Mexican scholarship recipients and students to access experiences of high academic and professional value, directly contributing to the development of the human capital required by the swine sector.

Through actions such as these, the Foundation reaffirms its commitment to agricultural education, specialized training and the promotion of new generations that will strengthen the future of swine farming in Mexico and Latin America.