The Guardian (USA)

US scientists who used scissors to kill lab rats must be fired, activists say

- Richard Luscombe

An animal rights group is demanding the firing of researcher­s at a Louisiana university who killed laboratory rats with scissors and a blunt blade – and used out-of-date anesthetic­s for pain relief.

The episodes are detailed in separate, self-reported notices of violation to the federal Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare (Olaw), which were sent by Tulane University in New Orleans and obtained by the Stop Animal Exploitati­on Now advocacy group.

Two adult rats were beheaded by the unnamed Tulane researcher­s using scissors, instead of a guillotine under anesthesia, a “significan­t deficiency” of globally recognized Institutio­nal Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) protocols, the notice states.

When the guillotine was used, to euthanize eight other rats, the blade was found to be blunt; and anesthesia administer­ed to more than 200 other rats was already beyond its expiration date.

All violations were marked as “corrected” in the notificati­ons, dated March and June of this year. But that is an inadequate response, according to Michael Budkie, executive director of the animal rights group, who has written to Tulane president Michael Fitts demanding a full inquiry and dismissal of those involved.

“This isn’t a single issue with a single employee,” he said. “Tulane research staff have committed multiple serious violations of federal regulation­s.

“Tulane has a long history of serious violations, and if their staff can’t even kill animals correctly, then why should we believe they can do science? If they’re serious about this, they need to draw a line in the sand and say we will not allow this, these people are gone.”

In August, Budkie’s group filed a federal complaint against Tulane for a previous episode in which a three-yearold macaque monkey at the university’s national primate research center was found dead in its cage with its head trapped.

Tulane was cited for using an enclosure that failed to protect the primate from injury, and together with more minor violations it led to the IACUC temporaril­y suspending protocols at the university.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) has long campaigned for the closure of all seven national primate research centers, including Tulane’s.

“These primate centers have served as breeding grounds for diseases as well as places of immeasurab­le pain, misery, and death and have been a total failure in advancing the health and wellbeing of humans,” Peta says on its website.

Louisiana is home to 13 federally registered animal laboratori­es, including two of the largest primate laboratori­es in the US, the group says.

Budkie, meanwhile, questions the validity of Tulane’s research.

“All these projects are federally funded with the goal of generating informatio­n that will be published in scientific journals,” he said.

“The problem with that is that for informatio­n and articles to be published, protocols have to be followed in compliance with federal regulation­s. These documents clearly indicate that none of that was happening, so any informatio­n generated in proximity to these violations is useless because it can’t be published. It’s junk science.

“The general public really needs to be concerned about this because even if they don’t care about the situation of the animals or that they’re essentiall­y being illegally decapitate­d, it’s federal money that’s paying for it. The public deserves better.”

In a statement to the Guardian, a Tulane spokespers­on said: “Tulane selfreport­ed these incidents and through its Institutio­nal Animal Care and Use committee took corrective action.

“Tulane is committed to the highest standards in compassion­ate veterinary care and is fully accredited by AAALAC Internatio­nal, a nonprofit organizati­on that promotes the humane treatment of animals in science.”

On its website, the university says its animal research is humane.

“Tulane requires that research animals be treated in an ethically responsibl­e way and with compassion and dignity. The university respects and accepts the moral and ethical implicatio­ns of using animals in research, and it is committed to being compliant with all government regulation­s pertaining to animal research.”

 ?? Photograph: Jeff Hitchcock/ Wikimedia Commons ?? Tulane University, in New Orleans, received a letter demanding a full inquiry into the animal deaths.
Photograph: Jeff Hitchcock/ Wikimedia Commons Tulane University, in New Orleans, received a letter demanding a full inquiry into the animal deaths.

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