How Animals End up in Labs
Companion Animals
Many dogs and cats used in laboratory experiments come from companies that breed animals for research purposes. Others were once trusting companions who simply got lost or stolen from their families.
Pound Seizure
Animal shelters in certain states are required to turn over homeless dogs to government-run facilities for medical experiments if they are not claimed by former or new guardians within five days of arriving at the shelter. This is commonly known as pound seizure .
Three USA states require pound seizure of government-run facilities: Minnesota, Oklahoma, and Utah. Thirteen states, including Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and West Virginia, forbid pound seizure. Most other states have no law and leave it up to county or town governments to decide.
Class A Dealers
Anyone selling animals to laboratories or selling more than 24 dogs or cats per year at the wholesale level must be licensed. Class A dealers maintain their own breeding colonies, such as puppy mills .
According to the States News Service, Class A dealers or breeders who choose to release animals for research; people who donate their companion animals to research; and private and federal facilities that breed animals are capable of supplying far more cats and dogs than are required by current laboratory demand.
Class B Dealers
Anyone 18 or older who is willing to pay a fee can obtain a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Class B dealer license. In states that allow pound seizure, Class B dealers may buy animals from pounds and animal shelters. "Bunchers" are also a vital source of animals in the dealers' network. Using sedatives hidden in meat, females in heat, and nets, they lure or trap dogs and cats. Some thieves pose as animal control officers and comb neighborhoods in vans, "confiscating" animals without tags. Many bunchers also purchase litters from unsuspecting people who allow their animal companions to breed and obtain animals from "Free to a Good Home" advertisements.
C.C. Baird, the largest and most notorious Class B animal dealer in the United States, purchased animals from people using false addresses and non-existent driver's license numbers. In March 2004, after years of efforts by animal protection organizations, the USDA filed a 108-page complaint listing hundreds of violations against C.C. Baird, his wife, Patsy, and their daughters, Jeanette and Patricia.
States News Service reports that there are about 50 "random source" animal dealers across the United States. They often keep hundreds of animals in squalid conditions and give them little food and water. These animals often are eventually sold to research laboratories for $200 to $500 each.
Primates
Chimpanzees and other primates used in U.S. laboratories are primarily captive-bred. Unwanted chimpanzees from zoos and circuses are sometimes sold to laboratories. Poachers also shoot chimpanzee mothers and take their infants for research. Many of the captured baby chimpanzees die before they reach the laboratory.
The Oregon National Primate Research Center brags that it maintains colonies of rhesus monkeys, snow monkeys, vervets, and baboons who were taken from the wild and/or brought to the center from other facilities.
From the jungle or savannah to the laboratory, every moment of the captured primate's experience is characterized by sickness, despair, fear, loneliness, and terror. Many primates die during quarantine and transport into the United States, with the mortality rate reaching a high of 20 percent at one point, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Those who survive the miserable journeys from their homes are funneled into gruesome, painful, repetitive, and often pointless experiments from which few emerge alive.
This is a video of primates trapped from Mauritius, sent to a vivisection breeder and then to the hell of an animal lab.
Mauritius and their trade in Monkeys
The island of Mauritius is one of the worlds largest exporters of primates to animal testing labs. Whilst many thousands of tourists holiday on Mauritius they are unaware that there are 3 monkey farms on the island where many thousands on monkeys await there fate. Many of these primates are wild caught and literally dragged from the jungle. If you are reading this and you are against animal cruelty then you should boycott the island of mauritius until they close down the cruel and disgusting moneky farms.
Thomas Cook sell 5% of all holidays on Mauritius. They know full well what goes on at the monkey farms on Mauritius yet refuse point blank to do the ethical thing and remove Mauritius from their brochures. They know full well that this would put the Mauritian government under immense pressure to close the monkey farms.
Please get more information HERE
Rodents and Other Animals
Birds, frogs, pigs, sheep, cattle, and many naturally free-roaming animals (e.g., prairie dogs and owls) are also common victims of experimentation. So are mice, rats, guinea pigs, hamsters, gerbils, and rabbits.
Most small animals used in laboratory experiments are bred by callous companies who view animals as little more than walking pin cushions and test tubes with whiskers. For example, Charles River Laboratories is one of the world's largest suppliers of rats, mice, hamsters, gerbils, rabbits, guinea pigs, and other animals for laboratory experiments. The Jackson Laboratory supplies approximately 2 million specially bred JAX Mice to major universities, medical schools, and research laboratories in the world every year.
Life in a Laboratory
Imagine living locked inside a closet without control over any aspect of your life. You can't choose when and what you eat, how you will spend your time, whether or not you will have a partner and children, and if you do, who that partner will be. You can't even decide when the lights go on and off. Think about spending your entire life like this, even though you have committed no crime.
This is life in a laboratory for animals. It is deprivation, isolation, and misery.
Now consider all the specialized needs of the species imprisoned for experimentation. Chimpanzees, in their natural homes, are never separated from their families and troops. They spend hours together every day, grooming each other and making soft nests for sleeping each night. They are loving and protective parents, and baby chimps will live close to their mothers for many years. But in a laboratory, chimpanzees are caged alone. There are no families, no companions, no grooming, no nests. There are only cold, hard steel bars and loneliness that goes on for so many years that most chimpanzees sink into depression, eventually losing their minds.
Rats and mice are denied a place to dig and hide. Dogs and cats are deprived of exercise, affection, and the homes that they long for with families to care for them. Rabbits have no room to leap. Pigs cannot root in the ground or build their nests. Even when the cages are clean, and this is not always the case, the animals are not allowed to engage in any normal behavior.
On top of the deprivation, there are the experiments. Animals are infected with diseases that they would never normally contract, tiny mice grow tumors as large as their own bodies, kittens are purposely blinded, rats are made to suffer seizures. Experimenters force-feed chemicals to animals, conduct repeated surgeries on them, implant wires in their brains, crush their spines, and much more. Think of what it would be like to endure this and then be dumped back into a cage, usually without any painkillers. Video footage from inside laboratories shows that animals cower in fear every time someone walks by their cages. They don't know if they will be dragged from their prison cells for an injection, blood withdrawal, a painful procedure or surgery, or death. Often animals see other animals killed right in front of them.
In the following links you can find more information about animal testings (vivisection) and what you can do to stop those atrocities:
Animal Voice Links Archive - Vivisection
Animal Voice (related articles)
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2 comments:
i was just passing by your page, and i was doing a research on animal testing and i saw the exact information on the Peta site, Which means you plagiarized your entire site. Just thought you should know. The point of a blog is to state YOUR facts and beliefs not others.
Thanks for the Info But I read that already. So be your own voice not someone else's
Dear Anonymous
As you can see, i have no problem posting your comment - nothing to hide.
The entries here in this blog are a combination of my own words and important pieces of articles i find online (well written and with valuable information).
When i post these, usually i link to the original sources as well.
The point of this blog - for me - is to be one more channel where people can obtain usefull info about animals and animal rights. As you said, you found the same info online @ the Peta site - very good - the more, the better... I can assure you that quite a good number of readers of this blog have been aware for the first time of some issues cause they bumped into this site - and then - thanks to the additional infos and material that i always provide at the end of each entries (videos, petitions, more related links etc), people can get deeper into the subjects when they want to.
If you wanna say things as "you plagiarized your entire site" then 1st you're wrong, cause you'll find my own words in there as well - but 2nd and more important:
your comment doesn't hurt me personally... cause i'm not in here for any personal recognition,
but just for adding one more voice - one more channel, one more possibility - for the animals in need.
Have you seen how much of my own work and time goes into this site, and all the others connected?
Have you checked the "Animal Voice - Links Archive"?
Do you think that researching for sources of information online and organise them doesn't take time?
Do you see any "Google Ads" in here?
Maybe you think i'm here for the glory and money?
I'm sure that you'll be able to find interesting material for your research as well, if you can get past your first observations.
My goal is to spread more awareness - and i don't mind in which way this is done as long as the animals can get good out of it. As i wrote above, my little "voice" has reached few people already that felt the need to change some of their habits because of what they read/saw here, so if that has done some good for the animals, that's my goal and only focus, as i'm not interested in any academic recognition but to see improvement in the life of many that suffer cause of human greed and ignorance.
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