New Scientific Review Finds Standard Laboratory Housing to Be Inadequate |

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Standard laboratory housing thwarts the basic behavioral needs
of rats, mice, and other rodents, inflicting physiological and
psychological harm and raising serious scientific and ethical questions
about using these animals in experiments, according to a scientific
review by PCRM’s Jonathan
Balcombe, Ph.D., in
the July issue of the journal Laboratory Animals.
In “Laboratory
Environments and Rodents’ Behavioral Needs: A Review,” Dr.
Balcombe, who holds a doctorate in ethology from the University
of Tennessee in Knoxville, examined more than 200 published studies
addressing the ill effects of impoverished housing typical of laboratories.
Among the many findings: Both rats and mice value and will work
for the opportunity to forage, build nests, explore, and have social
contact; rats kept in impoverished environments have smaller brains
than stimulated rats; solitary rats try to escape more than group-housed
rats; tens of millions of lab-bound mice dig, gnaw, and/or circle
neurotically for hours at a time, mostly at night when researchers
have gone home; and mice kept in barren cages consume more stress-relieving
drugs.
Unfortunately, the Animal Welfare Act does not mandate
any “environmental
enrichment” for rats and mice in laboratories because rodents
are excluded from protection under the act.
“These findings
provide further evidence that there is no such thing as a humane
animal experiment,” said Dr. Balcombe. “The
studies reviewed here show that the welfare of laboratory-caged
rodents is compromised when they are confined, isolated, and allowed
to develop stereotypical behaviors.”
PCRM Online,
August 2006
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