We need to accelerate a shift away from animal experimentation, not only for the benefit of human health but to mitigate humanity’s role in the sixth mass extinction.
Image from Primarily Primates:
Tested Macaques Now Safe and Happy
On May 19th we celebrated Endangered Species Day, dedicated to
learning about and taking action to protect endangered and
threatened species. 2023 also marks the 50th anniversary of the
landmark Endangered Species Act—a silver lining in the face of a
sixth mass extinction.
The Endangered Species Act (ESA):
Despite the Endangered Species Act working to protect more than
1,300 listed species, many considered endangered by the
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) are not
covered by the ESA. Most notably the long-tailed and southern
pig-tailed macaques.
Macaques are the most common non-human primates used in biomedical
research and are the majority of the 113,000 non-human primates
reportedly used in research in 2021 by the United States Department
of Agriculture.
Even with the populations of both the long-tailed and southern
pig-tailed macaques declining between 40-50% over the past few
decades, the animal research industry’s demand continues to climb.
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) has the ability
to grant protections to vulnerable species who face a single
threatening factor, and these macaques face more than five each.
Beyond animal research, these threats include pollution, residential
and commercial development, agricultural development including
factory farming, and the pet trade. The ESA can make it illegal to
import, export, take, possess, sell, or transport listed threatened
or endangered species.
Macaques are largely recognized by experts as adaptable generalist
primates. The sharp decline in their numbers can be attributed to a
two-pronged issue: the failure of the USFWS to protect these
macaques by granting them protections under the ESA and the
continued reliance on ineffective animal models for biomedical
research.
Macaques, along with species including mice, rats, pigs, and birds,
are subjected to cruel experimentation despite scientific research
that reveals subtle nuances in physiology, biochemistry, and genetic
expression drive misleading drug development.
In fact, between 90—95 percent of drugs found safe and effective in
animal tests fail during human clinical trials, primarily due to
toxicities not predicted by animal tests or because of lack of
efficacy.
We need to accelerate a shift away from animal experimentation, not
only for the benefit of human health but to mitigate humanity’s role
in the sixth mass extinction. Join us in protecting humans, animals,
and the environment by supporting recent developments in medical
science, such as human chip models, 3D printed human tissues, and
organoids that more faithfully recapitulate human physiology than
animal tests and have the potential to predict human safety much
more accurately.