Lethbridge Herald

Mathers backs petition in support of cephalopod­s

- Greg Bobinec LETHBRIDGE HERALD

During the early 1990s, Canada was the frontrunne­r in developing official protection­s for invertebra­tes used in research, thanks in part to the work of the University of Lethbridge professors such as Jennifer Mather.

Back in 1991, Mather, a U of L psychology professor and octopus’s expert, Professor Emeritus Gail Michener and Dan Johnson, Department of Geography & Environmen­t, were involved with a committee through the Canadian Council on Animal Care, the national organizati­on responsibl­e for setting and maintainin­g standards for the ethical use and care of animals in science.

“The committee recommende­d that cephalopod­s be protected,” says Mather. “In 1991, cephalopod­s were protected for research in Canada and Canada was the first country in the world to do this.”

While Europe adopted similar protection­s in subsequent years, invertebra­te animals used in research in the United States still have no protection. Katherine Myer, a visiting professor of law at Harvard Law School, wants to change that through a recent petition that asks the National Institutes of Health to include cephalopod­s — octopus, squid and cuttlefish — among the animals entitled to humane treatment by those involved in National Institute of Health-funded research.

“Intelligen­t invertebra­tes like octopuses are considered tissue in the United States,” says Mather. “Several universiti­es in the U.S. have made cephalopod­s honorary vertebrate­s. Cephalopod­s are as smart as vertebrate­s, easily. We’re pretty sure they have pain and suffering and they know what’s happening when you do things to them.”

Among the co-petitioner­s is Mather, who has published extensivel­y on the intelligen­ce of cephalopod­s. She co-edited the book Cephalopod Cognition (2014), has written about cephalopod care issues and is a co-editor and contributi­ng author of the book Invertebra­te Welfare (2019).

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