Posts

‘What I saw as a worker at a monkey breeding facility for animal testing and research’

facility

‘What I saw as a worker at a monkey breeding facility for animal testing and research’

For more than two decades, Kathleen Conlee, our vice president of Animal Research Issues in the U.S., has been working to end the use of animals in testing and research. But before she became an advocate for animal protection, she worked at a breeding facility that supplied primates to laboratories for research and testing. In this guest blog, I’ve invited her to tell us more about how this shaped her perspective and what life is like for animals inside these places. 

It all started when I was in class as an undergrad and heard people talking about feeding fig bars to monkeys. Before I knew it, I was studying rhesus monkeys in a lab on campus, and I was so fascinated by them. I wanted to spend my days learning about and working with primates.

But when I visited a facility that had monkeys living in small, barren cages, and I saw how they trained the animals to sit in a restraint chair for procedures to serve some scientific inquiry, I couldn’t picture myself doing that directly. At the time, though, I still wanted to work with primates and believed primate research was important for human health; seeking another avenue, I ultimately landed at a monkey breeding facility in South Carolina within weeks of graduating college.

The company I worked for had thousands of monkeys, mostly macaques, that they would breed and sell to research laboratories. I thought animal testing and research was necessary, but I also felt that the animals needed someone to look out for them. Over several years, I saw how millions of dollars in government grants were funneled in to support a system that inflicted terrible suffering on animals. I stopped believing that this was the best we could be doing for human health. Still, I stayed because I became fearful of what would happen to the monkeys if I left.

facility

Kathleen Conlee at the facility where she worked with primates used in animal testing.

The goal at this facility was to make sure the animals produced as many babies as possible. I remember being proud that I reduced the infant death rate and could identify thousands of individual monkeys and their family members. I didn’t think about the fact that while I was preventing their death as infants, I was ultimately sending those animals to a life of prolonged suffering. I was handed lists of numbers and told to pick which animals would be sent out next, filling orders as if they were a product.

We would sometimes receive monkeys from laboratories, and some of them suffered from severe psychological trauma. One, a rhesus macaque named Able, was terrified of anything but his “chow” biscuits and would mutilate himself—tearing his skin—when given anything new, even something as delicious as an apple or banana.

Laboratories with breeding colonies will often share images of monkeys in large social groups in big enclosures. These images are good optics for those who understand that primates are extremely social and need room to play. But there is a lot that is deliberately hidden. Some animals are stuck in small cages for quarantine or particular research protocols—a terrible cruelty for social creatures—or ripped from their families. The company would do “processing” during which the members of each group would be tattooed on their faces and chests, given physical exams and either returned to their group or pulled out for a shipment to another lab. The youngsters, who the day before were bonding with their family, would be put in a small cage and prepped for shipping. Mothers would wake up looking for them, crying out. You could hear the youngsters from a building across the property returning their calls. I can still hear their mournful cries—those will haunt me forever.

While I worked at the facility, I tried to improve the conditions for the monkeys in my care, such as incorporating an environmental enrichment program, adding fresh fruits and vegetables to their diet (they were only receiving “chow” biscuits each day), requiring a physical and behavioral assessment of each of the thousands of individuals every day and ensuring prompt medical or behavioral treatment when needed, and eliminating the use of facial tattoos. The company was ultimately caught illegally importing monkeys captured from the wild—I will never forget how terrified those animals seemed in confinement. I finally decided I just couldn’t do it anymore. 

I then went to work for a great ape sanctuary, which was an amazing experience. But I still felt I had to do more for those animals who had not yet been rescued, for those countless others I left behind in the system. Thankfully, Humane World for Animals, when it was still called the Humane Society of the United States, took a chance on me. I remember in my first year at the organization, I read a paper about a painful dental experiment; I realized the macaques came from the lab where I had worked and from the very time when I worked there. I had helped raise them—for that. That was just one group of many—what did the other animals endure because of what I had done? It was painful to consider this, but I felt immensely relieved that I was at last in the right place, doing something to fix it. 

I have been working for more than 20 years to move society away from using animals in harmful research and testing and toward the use of non-animal methods that are more effective and relevant to humans. To this day, I still care about human health AND animals. The good news is that choosing one doesn’t mean hurting the other and, in fact, investing in non-animal methods will ultimately benefit both. Non-animal methods that use human cells or are based on human data can more accurately and effectively predict how the human body will respond to drugs, chemicals and treatments.  

I’m proud of the work my team at Humane World for Animals has accomplished: ending chimpanzee research in the United States, securing a commitment by the Environmental Protection Agency to end mammalian testing, passing state laws that prohibit the sale of animal-tested cosmetics, getting 32 dogs who were being used in a pesticide test released from a lab into loving homes, and so much more. 

I still have nightmares about the facility where I worked. In them, I am trying desperately to go back there to help the animals, to make sure they are safe, but every nightmare involves some impossible obstacle. I am relieved when I wake up that I don’t work there anymore but I also face the reality of how much more there is to do in real life. It can feel like an endless sprint. When we have a victory and I think, “okay, maybe I’ve done enough to pay my dues,” the thought doesn’t last. And I don’t think it should. The victories won’t be enough until the day when no more animals suffer in labs. It will take all of us to make that happen. 

Kathleen Conlee is vice president of Animal Research Issues at Humane World for Animals in the U.S.

Source: Humane World For Animals

No Future For Factory Farming

farming

No Future For Factory Farming

Factory farming is a global problem that requires a global solution

Every year, factory farming condemns billions of animals to lives of cruelty and suffering for a fast profit.

Farm animals experience relentless suffering at the hands of factory farming – trapped in cages, mutilated, and pumped full of antibiotics to stay alive.

The problem will get worse before it gets better.

The rapid growth in demand for cheap meat and dairy means large increases are expected globally including in Africa, Asia and Latin America in the imminent future.

At World Animal Protection, we work tirelessly to ensure farmed animals live good lives by transforming the global food system and attitudes towards farm animal welfare.

A moratorium on factory farms is urgently needed to safeguard farm animal welfare, our climate, health and the environment.

Wild animal habitats

Cruel factory farming is destroying wild animal habitats to grow crops to feed farmed animals, this is having a devastating impact by:

  • Killing wildlife
  • Worsening the climate crisis
  • Poisoning our rivers
  • Creating superbugs and diseases that can transfer to humans

We believe that the welfare, treatment and attitude towards farmed animals’ lives across the world must change. Forever.

Farm animal welfare focus: Stopping the destructive animal feed trade

Cruel factory farming relies on a global trade in crops to feed farmed animals. Tropical forests are destroyed to make way for crops destined for factory farms around the world.

The special dietary needs of factory-farmed animals bred for profit drive the global trade in destructive animal feed.

Almost 80% of the world’s soybean crop is fed to farmed animals, not people. Pesticides are also used extensively, contaminating rivers and killing people and wild animals.

A moratorium on factory farming and a shift in farm animal welfare legislation would:

  • Free up land for communities to grow food for people
  • Support global food security and address the climate crisis
  • Relieve growing pressure on wild animal habitats and give wildlife a fighting chance

Factory farming is putting an extreme risk on public health and the planet’s future. Click the link below to read more in our latest report: Five worst health impacts of factory farming

Factory-farmed animal treatment

Animals in factory farms are bred to grow fast, have large litters, lay high numbers of eggs, or produce a maximum amount of milk. This causes great suffering over their short lifetimes.

Chickens are bred to reach their slaughter weight about twice as quickly as 40 years ago, and their legs cannot keep pace with the rapid body growth. As a result, many chickens suffer from painful, sometimes crippling leg disorders.

Ending irresponsible antibiotic use in farming

Three-quarters of the world’s antibiotics are used in animals, most on factory farms to stop stressed animals from getting sick. Antibiotic overuse causes superbugs to emerge. These can escape from farms via workers, into the food chain and our environment and waterways.

Already, the superbug crisis is responsible for 1.27 million deaths every year due to antibiotics no longer being effective.

The same low farm animal welfare conditions that give rise to superbugs can also cause diseases like bird flu or swine flu to emerge from factory farms and transfer to humans.

A moratorium and shift in farm animal welfare legislation on factory farming is the most effective way to safeguard public health and our environment.

This will lead to fewer farmed animals living in high welfare conditions, and no longer being subjected to harmful antibiotics.

Putting a stop to the future of factory farming

We protect the welfare of farmed animals by raising awareness of the harmful host of activities that are causing them to suffer.

The safeguarding of farm animal welfare is paramount. We must put an end to the devastation caused by factory farming to ensure farmed animals live better lives, we achieve this through raising awareness of:

  • The animal feed trade: The spike in cruel factory farming growth has a devastating impact on farmed and wild animals. There’s no bigger threat to the world’s animals, farmed and wild, than the expansion of factory farming
  • Improving animal welfare on farms: We work with the food industry to improve animal welfare and keep animals in an environment where they can benefit from a life worth living
  • Meat reduction: Encouraging less consumption of animal products to reduce animal suffering and protect our planet
  • Sustainable finance: A shift in attitude from fuelling destructive factory farming to investment in humane and sustainable systems
  • Promoting humane slaughter of farmed animals: To reduce animal cruelty and suffering

We are taking strides towards tackling the global problem with a global solution by:

  • Proactive campaigning to help safeguard farm animals and encourage a global food system shift
  • Producing and distributing animals in the wild and animals in farming reports
  • Forming strategic alliances with like-minded supporters that want change
  • Developing and building the case for humane sustainable alternatives
  • Raising awareness and knowledge of animal cruelty and protection
  • Ending the commercial exploitation of wildlife and farm animals

Our ambition

Factory farming and animal cruelty caused by current global food systems must end. For good.

Through shifting attitudes, safeguarding the way farm animals are treated, and implementing sustainable investment and practices, we can protect farm animals ensuring they live better lives as well as protecting our planet.

Are you ready to take action?

Join our mission and change the way the world works through people’s power. Take action today and support our efforts to stop farm animal cruelty and suffering. Forever.

Find out how you can get involved

Take Action

Source: World Animal Protection

Dog Fighting: More than the Abuse of Dogs

fighting

Dog Fighting: More than the Abuse of Dogs

Dog fighting conjures up images of cruelty, animal suffering, and greed – but that’s not the full picture. To that, add crime, gangsterism, violence, and drugs, and then the realities of dog fighting become clearer. 

It’s a problem of dangerous, disturbing proportions: people who flout animal protection laws flout other laws, too – just as those who violently hurt animals have no problem with violence towards people, too.

As dog fighting is illegal, the Cape of Good Hope SPCA works with the City of Cape Town’s Law Enforcement (Animal Control Unit) to enforce the law and educate communities about the harms of dog fighting and ways to spot it and report it.

This work pays off, as we saw in March when our Inspectors responded to a tip-off about youngsters inciting their dogs to fight – a regular occurrence, according to the Lotus River resident who reported the matter.

Young people become desensitised to animal suffering by witnessing dog fighting in their communities and imitating it with their own dogs. Numerous studies have also identified how animal abuse is often linked to child abuse and gender-based violence – two of the greatest societal ills in South Africa.

Please help us keep up the pressure to end dog fighting by supporting our anti-dog fighting campaigns. It takes teamwork and a united front to dismantle a secretive system that operates in the shadows of our communities – and in the darkest corners of the human psyche.

Source: SPCA