How Like Us Need They
Be?
The behavioral repertoire of nonhuman
primates is highly evolved and includes advanced
problem-solving capabilities, complex social relationships,
and sensory acuity equal or superior to humans. 1
Thomas M. Burbacher and Kimberly S.
Grant
It is a simple
question. How much like a human being does a member of another
species need to be before hurting or killing them becomes so
similar to hurting or killing a human that we are morally
compelled to react in a similar manner in both instances? If
there is no degree of similarity that will result in similar
treatment, then with what are we left? Why not treat people
who look differently, differently? Why not experiment on
albinos, or giants, or midgets, or dwarfs, or Chinese or
Pygmies? It is a simple question. Until those who choose to
experiment on the species most similar to ourselves answer
this question, we can only suppose that their justifications
must be rooted in (an unacknowledged?) bigotry.
Few individuals with more than a passing knowledge of who
monkeys and apes are would argue with the observation made
above by Burbacher and Grant. But such an understanding tends
to segregate people into one of two groups. Either, like
Burbacher and Grant, they see the close similarities between
human and nonhuman primates as an opportunity for
exploitation, or else, like a growing segment of society, they
see the affinities between the primate species as cause for
concern, especially in light of the ways that those in the
first group are taking advantage of them.
When the philosopher Jeremy Bentham wrote:
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The day may come, when the rest of the animal
creation may acquire those rights which never could have
been withholden from them but by the hand of tyranny.
The French have already discovered that the blackness of
the skin is no reason why a human being should be
abandoned without redress to the caprice of a tormentor
(see Lewis XIV's Code Noir). It may come one day to be
recognized, that the number of the legs, the villosity
of the skin, or the termination of the os sacrum, are
reasons equally insufficient for abandoning a sensitive
being to the same fate. What else is it that should
trace the insuperable line? Is it the faculty of reason,
or, perhaps, the faculty of discourse? But a full-grown
horse or dog is beyond comparison a more rational, as
well as a more conversable animal, than an infant of a
day, or a week, or even a month, old. But suppose the
case were otherwise, what would it avail? the question
is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can
they suffer?2 |
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he meant that the similarities between
species, even between races, are, in fact, the point on which
decisions regarding our interactions with others should turn.
Burbacher and Grant are representative of those who
see similarity as an opportunity to exploit without much pause
for the ethical questions that, for others, spring so readily
to the fore. Burbacher and Grant reinforce their position
quite strongly:
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Nonhuman primates are capable of advanced behaviors
that share important and fundamental parallels with
humans. These parallels include highly developed
cognitive abilities and binding social relationships.
The behavioral repertoire of these animals makes them
valuable models for research on the functional effects
of exposure to neurotoxic agents.3 |
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Apparently, the “important and fundamental
parallels” and the “highly developed cognitive abilities and
binding social relationships” that many primate species share
are insufficient, in the minds of Burbacher and Grant, to
suggest, by way of Bentham, that these animals should not be
“abandoned without redress to the caprice of a tormentor.” The
neurotoxic agents considered by Burbacher and Grant include
methylmercury, methanol, PCBs, lead, as well as other
neuroactive agents such as cocaine, LSD, morphine, and PCP.
They comment, “Drugs such as phencyclidine (PCP) produced an
overall disruptive effect on all test measures.”
The
cognitive abilities of monkeys and apes have increasingly been
shown to be strikingly like the cognitive abilities of humans.
Some of those uncovering these abilities have realized that
there is an implication to such discovery. Fagot, Wasserman
and Young, writing with regard to their own work on abstract
conceptualization in baboons note: “To be sure, the stakes are
high. What is at issue is no arcane point, but the very
distinction between the minds of human beings and nonhuman
animals.”4
As the distinction between the
mind of a human and the mind of a monkey becomes more subtle
and less easily defined, in all but terms of quantity, it
becomes ever more obvious that the moral distinctions we make
during our dealings with the two groups likewise must become
more carefully considered. This, also, is no arcane point.
Approximately sixty thousand nonhuman primates are used in the
U.S. alone every year for various scientific and educational
purposes.5 The methods used to raise, house, and
utilize these animals are inherently cruel.6 These
practices result in much mental duress and, not uncommonly,
physical pain and death.
Harry Harlow used the
similarity between rhesus monkey and human infants to study
the nature of love. He understood clearly, even in 1958, that
the two species’ similarities are such that what is learned
about the emotions and psyches of one species informs us of
the emotions and psyches of the other. He explained:
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The macaque infant differs from the human infant in
that the monkey is more mature at birth and grows more
rapidly; but the basic responses relating to affection,
including nursing, contact, clinging, and even visual
and auditory exploration, exhibit no fundamental
differences in the two species. Even the development of
perception, fear, frustration, and learning capability
follows very similar sequences in rhesus monkeys and
human children.7 |
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Harlow used these similarities to the
detriment of the baby monkeys on whom he experimented. He
showed that rhesus monkeys reared without contact with others
– monkeys or humans – developed severe mental problems and
behavioral aberrations. He apparently missed, altogether, the
most profound implications of his work – the moral
implications raised by the similarity of emotional need
between the species. He was dead to the implications of the
fact that what is learned about one of the primate species’
mind informs us of the minds of the other species and that
what would hurt us also hurts them in very similar and
familiar ways.
This similarity and familiarity with the minds of other
primates is not surprising. Charles Darwin pointed out there
should be a continuum of attributes throughout all species,
with the most similar attributes being found in the nearest
relatives. We should be able to recognize the emotions being
experienced by chimpanzees and monkeys precisely because we
are all so closely related. This close relationship means that
much about us, about the way we perceive and feel, is the
same.
Researchers studying the neurological basis of emotion have
exploited our similarities in a manner that suggests that they
too have missed the more profound implications of the familial
relationship that exists within the primate order. David
Amaral, at the University of California, Davis, and Ned Kalin,
at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, experiment on the
emotion centers of monkeys’ brains. The techniques used by
these scientists are similar.
The amygdala is the
almond-shaped region of the brain involved in basic emotions
such as fear, anger and aggression. There is an amygdala in
each hemisphere of the brain. Amaral and Kalin destroy or
otherwise damage these structures in monkeys’ brains and then
observe the changes in the monkeys’ behavior.
The
monkeys used by Kalin and Amaral are macaques. These monkeys
have amygdalas both relatively and absolutely larger than
human amygdalas. Comparative neurophysiology suggests that the
emotions experienced by these animals are more intense and
central to their lives than are the emotions experienced by
humans. As relatively reduced as emotional experiences must be
in humans, they are recognized as being a fundamental part of
our innermost being.
Kalin provides a description of one facet of his
work:
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“In nonhuman primates, we are examining behavioral
and physiological correlates of human anxiety. We have
identified a fearful endophenotype that is characterized
by high levels of trait anxiety, a specific pattern of
prefrontal brain electrical activity, and increased
levels of stress hormones in the blood and in the brain.
We have developed new techniques to selectively lesion
the primate amygdala and these studies have provided new
insights into the role of the amygdala in mediating
acute fearful responses as compared to states of long
term anxiety.”9 |
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Amaral et al.write:
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The amygdaloid complex is a prominent temporal lobe
region that is associated with "emotional" information
processing. Studies in the rodent have also recently
implicated the amygdala in the processing and modulation
of pain sensation, the experience of which involves a
considerable emotional component in humans. In the
present study, we sought to establish the relevance of
the amygdala to pain modulation in humans by
investigating the contribution of this region to
antinociceptive processes in nonhuman primates. Using
magnetic resonance imaging guidance, the amygdaloid
complex was lesioned bilaterally in six rhesus monkeys
(Macaca mulatta) through microinjection of the
neurotoxin ibotenic acid. This procedure resulted in
substantial neuronal cell loss in all nuclear
subdivisions of this structure.10 |
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Amaral writes to justify one federal grant
with an implicit statement of the similarity between monkeys
and humans:
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[C]omplete amygdala lesions will be produced in
neonatal macaque monkeys. The effects of these lesions
on mother-infant and juvenile-juvenile interactions will
be evaluated. Future studies (when the neonates have
matured) will analyze dyadic and tetradic social
interactions and thus allow comparisons of the severity
of effects of neonatal or mature amygdala lesions on
social behavior. During these experiments, the
pituitary-adrenal activation of lesioned and control
monkeys in response to social and restraint stressors
will also be analyzed. These studies will provide
important insights into the neurobiology of normal
social behavior and may contribute to an understanding
of pathologies of social communication in disorders such
as autism.11 |
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The similarities between the primate
species’ minds, emotions, and social behaviors are being
relied on and used as justifications for modern experiments on
the brains of awake, usually restrained, monkeys. Commonly,
the monkeys are required to perform some cognitive task in
order to receive a small food reward or a few drops of liquid.
It is a standard procedure in these types of studies to
deprive the monkeys of food and/or water in order to motivate
them to perform for the vivisector. The clear recognition that
monkeys and humans have minds and thought processes that are
very similar motivates some scientists to utilize them as
experimental subjects in these ways, as at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology:
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The ability to abstract principles or rules from
direct experience allows behaviour to extend beyond
specific circumstances to general situations. For
example, we learn the 'rules' for restaurant dining from
specific experiences and can then apply them in new
restaurants. The use of such rules is thought to depend
on the prefrontal cortex (PFC) because its damage often
results in difficulty in following rules. Here we
explore its neural basis by recording from single
neurons in the PFC of monkeys trained to use two
abstract rules.12 |
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Advances in technology are allowing
scientists to make ever-finer measurements of physiological
processes in alert monkeys engaging in cognitive acts. Much of
what is known regarding the neurophysiologic similarities of
the primates is a result of these technological advances, and
an argument might be made that it is only in recent years that
the profundity of the discoveries has begun to amass into a
noticeable body of evidence. But this is not the case at all.
The close mental, emotional, and behavioral similarities
between humans and other primate species has been well known
for many years, while careful scientific observation and
experimentation have been demonstrating these facts for nearly
a century. Wolfgang Kohler, whose investigations Jane Goodall
has cited13 as among the most important in the
literature, wrote in 1925 that: “The chimpanzees manifest
intelligent behavior of the general kind familiar in human
beings.”14
In the early 1960’s scientists were subjecting monkeys,
increasingly, to experiments that displayed the emotional
vulnerability and cognitive depths of these animals. Harlow’s
decades-long career as well as his success at inspiring young
experimental psychologists, resulted in an explosion of papers
associated with maternal and social deprivation and stress,
particularly in infants. These scientists were exploiting what
they already believed to be true regarding the similarity
between the emotional fragility of infant monkeys and
humans.15
Masserman, Wechkin, and Terris
published the results of a study that underscores the fact
that those who were experimenting on monkeys, even forty years
ago, clearly expected them to behave as humans might in
similar situations. Rhesus monkeys were trained to pull on one
of two chains, depending on the color of a flashing light, in
order to receive food. After training, another monkey, held in
restraints, was displayed through a one-way mirror.
By pulling the chains in the correct fashion, the first
monkey would receive the food reward, but one of the chains
now delivered a powerful and painful electric shock to the
restrained monkey. It was discovered that most of the monkeys
would not shock another monkey even if it meant not being able
to eat. One of the animals went without food for twelve days
rather than hurting his or her companion. Monkeys who had been
shocked in previous experiments themselves were even less
willing to pull the chain and subject others to such
torment.16 (The scientists who had seen monkeys
shocked, however, continued to strap more monkeys into the
chair.)
If evidence for the close similarity between a human’s and
a nonhuman’s mind and sense of self was observed and published
so long ago, and if continuing experimentation has contributed
to and expanded that understanding throughout the century, why
hasn’t something been done to bring our treatment of these
animals more in line with the guidelines we tend to employ
when dealing with those in society less able to care for
themselves and assert their own interests?
The answer to this question is moderately complex. Primate
vivisection increased rapidly in the 1950’s and 1960’s. Prior
to this time the availability of monkeys was more limited and
many fewer researchers were using these exotic animals. This
changed largely due to the importation of many hundreds of
thousands of monkeys for polio research17 as well
as the U.S. government’s decision to keep pace or surpass the
Soviet’s primate-based biomedical research programs. In the
early sixties the U.S. government began funding facilities for
the breeding, housing, and utilization of monkeys and apes for
research purposes. Today, federally funded projects around the
country maintain many thousands of monkeys and make them
available to government-funded researchers.18 A few
large private primate suppliers and consumers of primates
imported over sixty-four thousand monkeys between 1995 and
2000.19
Part of the answer to the question lies in the fact that
the number and type of experiments on primates has increased
to such a degree in such a short time. The public’s awareness
of the issue was less informed simply because many fewer
experiments were being performed and much less information
concerning the minds and emotions of these animals was being
published. Now, more people are being exposed to, more people
are being made aware of, and also more people are deciding to
participate in these studies than only a few decades
ago.
Another factor is the absence of checks and
balances, no bureaucratic or regulatory mechanisms are in
place to assess the information or consider the implications
of the body of evidence and guide our policies in this area.
Without such a mechanism, the federal government continues to
promote primate research, provide animals to researchers, make
funds available, and invent reasons to use primates in harmful
experiments.20 There is nothing built into the
system to regulate it in any moral manner, to evaluate current
knowledge and consider the implications for new proposals.
Those in a position to raise any doubt are themselves
financially and professionally interested in seeing the
practice continue, and they work within a community of equally
interested individuals.
Within the private sphere there are professional
organizations that should be monitoring scientific endeavor
and providing leadership to lawmakers and the public with
regard to the discoveries that animals other than humans have
minds and emotions so similar to our own that experimenting on
them, that keeping them in concentration-like
conditions21, that killing them and harming them to
further our own real or perceived interests is as unthinkably
immoral as it would be if humans were being treated in similar
ways. These organizations include the American Veterinary
Medical Association, the American Association for Laboratory
Animal Science, and the American Society of Primatology. They
each have members claiming to be primate experts.
The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) has not
published a position specific to the use of primates in
research. The AVMA lumps all animals together and states: “We
oppose unnecessary restrictions on the use of animals in
scientific research” but remains mute on what “unnecessary”
might mean. Given the close similarity between the primate
species, it is apparent that restrictions are necessary. Given
the Association’s claim that it is the authorized voice for
the profession22 and the claim that veterinarians
have an ethical duty to: “[F]irst consider the needs of the
patient: to relieve disease, suffering, or disability while
minimizing pain or fear,”23 it seems that this
possible check on the use of these animals has failed
completely. The public tends to view veterinarians as animal
experts; the Association’s silence in this area might be seen
by policy-makers in Congress as support for the status quo,
which it probably is.
The American Association for Laboratory Animal Science
(AALAS) is the professional organization for animal
technicians and veterinarians working in laboratory settings.
The only reasons the organization might be expected to speak
out for these animals is the intimacy that the members have
with the many ways the animals are harmed and the fact that
the public (mistakenly) expects veterinarians to be advocates
for animals. But, the members are financially beholden to the
institutions for which they work, and it is rare for anyone to
speak out since doing so may jeopardize their livelihood. And,
the members are generally willing and enthusiastic
participants in the experiments themselves.
AALAS has no policy concerning the care of, or
experimentation on, primates. AALAS defers to federal
regulation in all matters dealing with animal care and
use.24 This is akin to the National Educational
Association or the National Rifle Association allowing the
federal government to decide what their policies concerning
education or gun control should be. The public cannot look to
AALAS for any leadership in this area.
The American Society of Primatology (ASP) should be the
body speaking the loudest about the implications raised by the
notable similarities between the species. The ASP counts among
its members: Sarah Boysen (“The present findings demonstrate
that chimpanzees can classify natural objects spontaneously
and that such classifications may be similar to those that
would be observed in human subjects.)25 ; Frans de
Waal (“It is really hard for me to imagine that they do not
[have an imagination]. Chimpanzees are very innovative
creatures - they deceive each other (and us!) all the time and
invent many different games for themselves. All of these
abilities require some degree of forethought to what might be
the outcome of an action.”)26; Roger Fouts (“Humans
and chimpanzees differ in their intelligence by degree, not in
the kind of mental processes.”)27; Robert
Ingersol (“Nim’s last words to me were, ‘Out—Hurry—Key—There….
Key—Out’, very sad. Nim passed away March 10, 2000. I did not
expect that he would die at a very young twenty-six years old
since chimps usually live well beyond forty years quite
regularly. It has taken me this entire year to be able to
speak and now write about Nim. He was my friend. Maybe my
closest friend. He taught me about right and good, and trust
and certainty, and he taught me what true friends are. Life
long friendship, and if you had ever seen us together you
would know what I mean. I knew Nim for twenty-two of his
twenty-six years.”)28; Vernon Reynolds (“There is
no satisfactory way to convince ourselves of our separate
nature, to be certain we feel or experience something they do
not feel or experience; all the evidence points the other way,
to commonality.”)29; Duane Rumbaugh (“Although
nonhuman primates such as rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) have
been useful models of many aspects of cognition and
performance, it has been argued that, unlike humans, they may
lack the capacity to respond as predictor-operators. Data from
the present series of experiments undermine this claim,
suggesting instead a continuity of predictive competency
between humans and nonhuman primates.”)30; and
Shirley Strum (“I was constantly struck by how much more like
humans the baboons now seemed. They learned through insight
and observation, passing new behaviors from one to another
both within a single lifetime and across many lifetimes. This
is social tradition, the beginnings of what eventually became
‘culture.’”)31.
In spite of this thread of understanding within the ASP,
the leadership is dominated by laboratory researchers intent
on exploiting the similarities nonhuman primates share with
us. Often, very often in fact, the leadership is involved in
research of questionable value and blatant cruelty. At times
it seems that the leadership’s understanding of the
complexities of monkeys’ minds, the emotional sensitivity of
the animals, and the fragility of their developing psyches is
cause for the scientists to devise the most absurd and deviant
experiments. A paper published by a current and a past
president of the Society is illustrative of this
point.
The current (as of 2001) president of the ASP is
John Capitanio, a researcher at the California Regional
Primate Research Center (CRPRC) at the University of
California, Davis. His colleague, also at CRPRC, William
Mason, is a past president of the Society and also a past
student of Harry Harlow.
The authors write:
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Cognitive style, reflected in the generation of
novel solutions and the use of identifiable response
strategies in problem-solving situations, was contrasted
in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) reared individually
with either canine companions or inanimate surrogate
mothers. Four experiments were conducted over a 5-year
period, examining problem solving in relatively
unstructured as well as more formal situations. Results
indicated that whereas the 2 rearing groups did not
differ on most measures of performance, consistent
response strategies were identified for the dog-raised
monkeys. The results were compared with previously
published data from the same monkeys demonstrating
rearing group differences in abilities to engage in
complex social interaction. The animate nature of the
early rearing environment may facilitate the development
of a cognitive style that influences problem-solving
abilities in both the social and nonsocial
realms.32 |
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In the "General Methods" section of their
paper, Capitanio and Mason explain that they took six male and
six female monkeys away from their mothers before they were 24
hours old. The infants were each isolated with an electric
cloth-covered heating pad for 14-18 days. At this time they
were each introduced to either "an adult female mongrel dog"
or "a plastic hobbyhorse wrapped with acrylic fur around its
midsecton." When the monkeys were about three-and-a-half years
old, they were taken from their "kennel mate," a dog or a
plastic hobbyhorse, and again placed in solitary confinement.
With this sort of experimentation being performed by the ASP
leadership, sanctioned by a NIH Regional Primate Research
Center, paid for by the United States government, it should be
clear that no change is likely to occur through normal
channels.
The ASP leadership is comprised of those who conduct
harmful experiments on primates themselves or are employed in
the support of such experiments.33 Many members are
similarly employed.34
So, a second part of
the answer to the question of why our treatment of these
animals is not more in line with the guidelines we tend to
employ when dealing with those in society less able to care
for themselves and assert their own interests, is the fact
that there is not an official regulatory mechanism in place
that would cause or encourage an evaluation (let alone an
evolution) of current policies, nor is there a professional
organization acting on behalf of the animals – due to a vested
economic interest – such as AALAC or the ASP, or else for some
other, less clear reason, as the AVMA.
These two factors – the relatively recent mounting of
evidence and experiments, and the lack of checks or balances –
reinforce the tendency in society to discount the interests of
others.
A third part of the answer lies in the fact that we tend
not to notice those who have no voice when no voice of protest
nor assertion of their rights has been raised. When a voice
does arise, those in power tend to work to discount and
marginalize it. When the issue of rights has arisen, whether
involving race, gender, mental faculty, sexual orientation,
nationality, religion or any other category, history is clear
that the group in power has resisted the extension of
protected status to other groups. Simply, prejudice against
others, bigotry, the perceived protection of one’s own
interests, is a fundamental aspect of human
behavior.
How like us do they have to be before the
evil we do to them should be termed criminal?
This
question deserves an answer. Historically, the segregation of
nonhuman animals has been based on premises that have
evaporated in step with discoveries concerning the animals’
capabilities and characteristics. None of the reasons have
been able to withstand close investigation and observation.
Whether the claim has been that only humans use tools, make
tools, can communicate with language, are altruistic, engage
in war, have beliefs, engage in ritual, possess a culture, are
capable of abstraction, of humor, of courage, of deceit, or of
responsibility to others, the claims have all failed. And they
have failed with regard to other primates precisely because,
as we attempt to describe ourselves, we also describe those
with whom we share such close and intimate
ancestry.
How like us do they have to be before the
evil we do to them should be termed criminal?
This
question deserves an answer, and those with the greatest
access to these animals should be required to answer it. And
until they are willing and able to do so to the satisfaction
of society at large, they should be compelled, legally, to
cease their manipulations of these animals.
A common
concern voiced by the vivisectors is that if primates are
acknowledged to be so like us that we should stop our
experiments on them, then where will it all stop? If
chimpanzees are given the simplest rights today, and monkeys
tomorrow, then how long will it be before dogs, cats, rabbits,
rats, mice and flies are similarly protected? The answer must
lie in the question: How like us do they have to be before the
evil we do to them should be termed criminal?
Those
wishing to maintain a sharp distinction between humans and all
other species must explain what it is that keeps us apart. Why
are compassion, sympathy, concern, and justice concepts we
should reserve for humans alone? Why should each of these
terms be redefined when speaking of humans or other animals?
When we speak of humane care, why should this term be
differently applied to human children and monkeys?
How
like us do they have to be before the evil we do to them
should be termed criminal? How like us need they be?
The public’s awareness of the ethically significant
similarities between the species is increasing. More people
are becoming alarmed and are demanding that the government act
to protect these animals from those who are abusing them. Over
200 organizations – including large national organizations and
small grass roots groups – have added their names to a demand
for an immediate moratorium on primate
experimentation:
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A Call for an
Immediate Moratorium on Primate
Research
During the last 35 years, exploitative primate
research has consumed billions in American tax dollars
while it has contributed very little to human
welfare.
It has diverted funding from non-animal
research technology that could have been more productive
and from social programs – such as drug rehabilitation,
prenatal care, and nutrition education – that could have
benefited, directly and indirectly, the majority of the
population.
While over three decades of
primate-based research has not produced the promised
cures for human diseases, it has taught us about the
sensitivity of the nonhuman primate subjects. We now
know that nonhuman primates have emotional responses
remarkably similar to human emotional
responses.
Apes who have learned American Sign
Language have used this human language to clearly
communicate frustration, grief, and other emotions.
There are convincing indications that nonhuman primates
in experiments suffer as intensely, both physically and
emotionally, as humans would suffer in the same
experiments. Recognizing this, we are ethically
compelled to stop using them in experiments.
We
are calling for the creation of a presidential advisory
committee composed of primate experts and informed lay
people – a panel agreed upon by both pro-animal and
pro-research advocates – to critically examine the
evidence and make a recommendation to the president and
the nation regarding the ethical implications of
continuing exploitative primate research.
Until
the committee's report is finalized, federal funding for
primate research should cease.
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Rick Bogle, January, 2002
Notes
1. Burbacher TM, Grant KS. 2000. Methods
for studying nonhuman primates in neurobehavioral toxicology
and teratology. Neurotoxicology and Teratology. Jul-Aug;
22(4): 475-86. Review.
2. Bentham, J. 1823. An
Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation,
Chapter XVII, note.
3. See note 1.
4. Fagot J,
Wasserman EA, Young ME. 2001. Discriminating the relation
between relations: the role of entropy in abstract
conceptualization by baboons (Papio papio) and humans (Homo
sapiens). Journal of Experimental Psychology and Animal
Behavioral Processes. Oct; 27(4): 316-28.
5. United
States Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service. 1998. Animal Welfare Report, Fiscal Year
1998. Table 6. “Number of Animals Used by Research from First
Reporting Year (1973) to the Present.”
6. Normal
social bonding in primates begins nearly at birth between the
mother and infant. Normal social situations allow monkeys to
interact with mothers, siblings, and peers almost constantly.
This is critical to normal social and mental development.
Repetitive motions such as twirling, pacing, and flipping are
termed stereopathies, and are a recognized result of social
deprivation in monkeys. Self-mutilation, or self-injurious
behavior, is a recognized result of individual housing and
social deprivation in monkeys. At the Washington Regional
Primate Research Center (WaRPRC) infants are routinely removed
from their mothers at birth and nursery reared. There, infants
have contact with other infants for one hour a day, five days
a week. At the Tulane Regional Primate Research Center infants
are removed from their mothers within three days of birth. It
is estimated by the New England Regional Primate Research
Center that at least ten percent of the monkeys there
self-mutilate themselves to such a serious degree that
veterinary intervention is required. At the Oregon Regional
Primate Research Center, at least one thousand monkeys are
individually housed; self-mutilation is not uncommon there or
at the California Regional Primate Research Center. A
veterinarian, who worked at the Wisconsin Regional Primate
Research Center a decade ago, claims to have achieved pair
housing of seventy percent of that facility’s primate
population. After leaving, he believes that the percentage has
fallen to no more than thirty percent pair or group housed.
This is the norm throughout the industry.
7. Harlow H.
1958. The nature of love. Address of the President at the
sixty-sixth Annual Convention of the American Psychological
Association, Washington, D. C., August 31, 1958. First
published in American Psychologist, 13, 573-685.
8.
Comparative neurophysiology teaches that the relative size of
the regions or structures of an animal’s brain explains much
concerning their abilities and behavior. Cats possess a better
sense of balance than humans because their cerebellum is
relatively larger. Dogs have better senses of smell because
their olfactory lobes are much larger. That humans are so much
better problem solvers is related to our own large cerebral
cortex.
9. Kalin N. 2001. “Brain Mechanisms Underlying
Fear, Anxiety and Depression.” Neuroscience Training Program,
University of Wisconsin, <
http://ntp.neuroscience.wisc.edu/faculty/kalin.html > (as
of) December.
10. Manning BH, Merin NM, Meng ID, Amaral
DG. 2001. Reduction in opioid- and cannabinoid-induced
antinociception in rhesus monkeys after bilateral lesions of
the amygdaloid complex. Journal of Neuroscience. Oct
15;21(20):8238-46.
11. Amaral D. Neurobiology of
Primate Social Behavior. Grant no. 5R01MH057502 National
Institute of Mental Health: 1998-2003. CRISP (Computer
Retrieval of Information on Scientific Projects) database
http://crisp.cit.nih.gov/.
12. Wallis JD, Anderson KC,
Miller EK. 2001. Single neurons in prefrontal cortex encode
abstract rules. Nature. Jun 21; 411(6840): 953-6.
13.
Goodall J. 1986. The Chimpanzees of Gombe: Patterns of
Behavior (p 7). Boston: Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press.
14. Kohler W. 1925 (2nd edition,
1951, p 265) The Mentality of Apes. Routledge &
Kegan Paul LTD.
15. For an overview of these
experiments up until 1986, see Stevens ML. 1986. Maternal
Deprivation Experiments in Psychology: A Critique of Animal
Models. Published jointly by the American, National, and
New England Antivivisection Societies. But maternal and social
deprivation experiments continue to be funded by the National
Institutes of Health today throughout the country.
16.
Masserman J, Wechkin S, Terris W. 1964. ‘Altruistic’ behavior
in rhesus monkeys. American Journal of Psychiatry vol. 121:
584-5.
17. “Before the race for the polio vaccine,
there were an estimated 5 to 10 million rhesus macaques in
India. During the height of the vaccine work, in the late
1950s and early 1960s, the United States alone was importing
more than 200,000 monkeys a year, mostly from India. By the
late 1970s, there were fewer than 200,000 rhesus macaques in
India,” (p. 250). Blum D. 1994. The Monkey Wars. Oxford
University Press.
18. See note 5. Of these animals,
many are held in National Institutes of Health (NIH) sponsored
facilities. The eight Regional Primate Research Centers have
approximately twenty thousands monkeys on hand at any one
time. Outside the RPRC system, other universities such as Wake
Forest and the University of South Alabama have large
populations, also sponsored directly by the NIH. NIH maintains
approximately one thousand monkeys itself at the National
Animal Center in Poolesville, Maryland. The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) has a large population at the National
Center for Toxicological Research just outside Little Rock,
Arkansas, and owns another 3000 monkeys kept on Morgan Island
off the coast of South Carolina. The Department of Defense
maintains monkey colonies at various facilities. Of the nearly
sixty thousand primates being used every year, a very large
percentage must be paid for directly with tax dollars.
19. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service LEMIS [Law
Enforcement Management Information Service]. Data tabulated
and itemized at the Coalition to End Primate Experimentation
(CEPE) website:
http://cepe.enviroweb.org/imports_chart.html
20. As a
single example among many: NONHUMAN PRIMATE MODELS OF
NEUROBIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS OF ADOLESCENT ALCOHOL ABUSE AND
ALCOHOLISM Release Date: October 4, 2001 RFA: RFA-AA-02-006
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
(http://www.niaaa.nih.gov/) Letter of Intent Receipt Date:
January 21, 2002 Application Receipt Date: February 19, 2002
“PURPOSE: The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism (NIAAA) invites applications using nonhuman primate
models to focus on the following areas: 1) neurobiological
mechanisms and risk factors for alcoholism during late
childhood through adolescence; 2) the relative contribution
and/or interaction of genetic, environmental, and social
factors (e.g., stress, peer influences) with neurobiological
mechanisms in the development of adolescent alcohol abuse; 3)
evaluation of the immediate and long-term consequences of
heavy drinking during adolescence on cognitive/brain
functioning; and 4) the contribution of early alcohol exposure
(juvenile and adolescent periods) to excessive drinking and
abnormal cognitive and social functioning during subsequent
developmental stages…. FUNDS AVAILABLE: The NIAAA intends to
commit approximately $2.5 million in FY 2002 to fund
approximately 6 to 8 new and/or competitive continuation
grants in response to this RFA….” (Viewable at
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-AA-02-006.html
as of January 1, 2002.)
21. For instance: On December
15-18, 1998, during an inspection of the Oregon Regional
Primate Research Center, the USDA inspector, Dr. Isis
Johnson-Brown, DVM, noted in her written report that “the area
in front of the feeding pads in corral 3 that the animals have
to cross to enter the inside feeding area is excessively wet,
composed of a mixture of mud, algae, urine and feces, and the
same conditions exist in the corners of corrals 4 and 6.”
22. American Veterinary Medical Association
Constitution 2000 Revision. Article II.
23. Principles
of Veterinary Medical Ethics of the American Veterinary
Medical Association (AVMA), (1999 Revision). Part II,
Professional Behavior, paragraph A.
24. American
Association for Laboratory Animal Science. Policy on Humane
Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. "The American Association
for Laboratory Animal Science (AALAS) endorses the United
States Government Principles for the Utilization and Care of
Vertebrate Animals Used in Testing, Research, and
Training."
25. Brown DA, Boysen ST. 2000 Spontaneous
discrimination of natural stimuli by chimpanzees (Pan
troglodytes). Journal of Comparative Psychology Dec; 114(4):
392-400.
26. DeWaal responding to a PBS broadcasted
Scientific American Frontiers viewer’s online question: “Do
chimpanzees have emotions?” April 17, 2001.
http://www.pbs.org/saf/1108/hotline/hdewaal.htm
27.
Fouts R. 1997. Next of Kin: What Chimpanzees have Taught Me
about Who We Are, p 350 (emphasis in original). William Morrow
and Company, Inc.
28. Ingersol B. 2000. (unpublished
manuscript) Chimp Friends: Nim Chimpsky 1973-2000.
29.
Reynolds V, Reynolds J. 1993. Riding on the backs of apes. In
Ape, Man, Apeman: Changing Views Since 1600. Evaluative
Proceedings of the Symposium Ape, Man, Apeman: Changing Views
Since 1600, a part of the Pithecanthropus Centennial
(1893-1993) Congress “Human Evolution in its Ecological
Context.” Leiden, The Netherlands, 1993.
30. Washburn
DA, Rumbaugh DM. 1991. Rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) complex
learning skills reassessed. International Journal of
Primatology. Aug; 12(4): 377-88.
31. Strum SC, 1987.
Almost Human: A Journey into the World of Baboons, p 153.
Random House.
32. Capitanio JP, Mason WA. 2000.
Cognitive style: problem solving by rhesus macaques (Macaca
mulatta) reared with living or inanimate substitute mothers.
Journal of Comparative Psychology. Jun;
114(2):115-25.
33. Besides Capitanio, a recent past
president, Melinda Novak, the current treasurer, Steven
Shapiro, and the current executive secretary, Janette Wallis,
are all affiliated with primate vivisection. Novak works with
the primate colony at the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, and is a frequent research collaborator of Steven
Suomi’s, another of Harlow’s students. Steven Shapiro is a
primate veterinarian at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in
Houston. Janette Wallis works in direct support of the Baboon
Research Resource Program at the University of Oklahoma, a
supplier of baboons to “three colleges of the Health Sciences
Center, two non-profit research institutions on the Oklahoma
Health Center Campus, the three main university medical
teaching and research institutions in the State of Oklahoma,
and 10 medical centers located throughout the United States,”
(from CRISP entry for grant# 5P40RR012317).
34. Of the
797 members listed in the ASP’s 1999 Directory, 101 were
either known by name to this author as primate vivisectors or
listed themselves as affiliated with institutions such as the
NIH Regional Primate Research Centers dedicated to the
experimental use of primates. Many others were listed as
affiliated with institutions known to be involved in primate
experimentation, but not exclusively so. Persons from this
latter group are not included among the 101. The percentage of
ASP members directly involved with the primate experimentation
industry is likely significant with regard to ASP policy
decisions.
35. Bogle R. 1997. “A Call for an Immediate
Moratorium on Primate Research.” Coalition to End Primate
Experimentation. The current list of signatories is available
at http://www.primatefreedom.com/moratorium/index.html
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