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Animal Experimentation:

Laboratory environments. Balcombe 2006
 



Balcombe JP. Laboratory environments and rodents’ behavioural needs: a review. Laboratory Animals 2006;40:217–35. Download (181kb).
 

ABSTRACT
Laboratory housing conditions have significant physiological and psychological effects on rodents, raising both scientific and humane concerns. Published studies of rats, mice and other rodents were reviewed to document behavioural and psychological problems attributable to predominant laboratory housing conditions. Studies indicate that rats and mice value opportunities to take cover, build nests, explore, gain social contact, and exercise some control over their social milieu, and that the inability to satisfy these needs is physically and psychologically detrimental, leading to impaired brain development and behavioural anomalies (e.g. stereotypies). To the extent that space is a means to gain access to such resources, spatial confinement likely exacerbates these deficits. Adding environmental ‘enrichments’ to small cages reduces but does not eliminate these problems, and I argue that substantial changes in housing and husbandry conditions would be needed to further reduce them.

 

Biologist Jonathan Balcombe, Ph.D. (Ethology), author of The Use of Animals in Higher Education, a forthcoming book on animal pleasure, and many scientific articles on humane education and animal behavior, promotes alternatives to animal use in research and education. Formerly an Associate Director with The Humane Society of the United States, he is currently a Research Consultant with the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.

 


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