In This Issue
Great response to Din Dins pet supplements
Check out the Din Dins product range
Notcutts boss Andy King quits to join Tesco's
New vision for Glee revealed by organisers i2i Events Group
Prosecution collapses against ex-pet shop owner
Crown Petfoods, Mars Petcare, Nestlé Purina and Positive Petcare sponsor pet industry event
AQUA 2013 seminars will have universal appeal
Fishkeeper Inverness opens at Simpsons Garden Centre
New orthopaedic pet bedding from Scruffs
Key appointments at Natural Instinct
Pet retailers urged to enter new industry awards
Partner in Pet Food buys Agro-Trust division
Pets at Home seeks pet product inventors
Burgess Pet Care allergen-free dog food wins Asda listing
One-in-three pet owners wish their pet could talk
A few last-minute tickets available for GIMA's
Neon LED pet collars help you locate dogs and cats in the dark
Research on animals in UK rises by 8% to exceed 4m procedures
Increase in number of dogs used in experiments
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Research on animals in UK rises by 8% to exceed 4m procedures

The number of scientific procedures carried out in Britain on animals rose by 8% in 2012, compared with the previous year, according to figures published by the Home Office on Tuesday.


The overall rise in use of animals comes despite the government's pledge to reduce their use in scientific research.

The number of procedures broke through four million for the first time, and animal welfare campaigners condemned the increase.

In a statement the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals called the latest numbers alarming and said it was a wake-up call to all involved to find ways to replace and reduce the use of animals in research.

Gavin Grant, the RSPCA's chief executive, said of GM animals, which now account for more than 50% of procedures: "It's often stated that many procedures are simply [to do with] breeding animals. Let's be clear, breeding relates to the procedures used to create genetically altered animals, for example, hormone injections and surgery to implant embryos.

"Large numbers of animals also lose their lives as part of the process. All of these present very serious ethical and welfare issues, quite apart from the fact that when born, genetically altered animals may experience painful or distressing side-effects that can be hard to predict."

Judy MacArthur Clark, head of the Home Office's Animals in Science Regulation Unit, said that the 8% overall rise might sound dramatic: "But we know, within that, there's been a significant increase in the breeding of genetically altered animals and this [is] primarily mice and fish. That's a 22% increase that takes it up to nearly 2m animals in that category."

The number of procedures on animals in research rose by 317,200 to 4.11m last year, largely due to rising use of genetically modified animals, most of these being mice.

The number of non-human primates used in research was also up by 545 in 2012, a rise of 22%.

The number of procedures is higher than the number of animals used in UK laboratories because the breeding of a GM animal, for example, counts as a procedure in itself and an individual animal can undergo several procedures during the course of a research project.

Excluding the figures for breeding GM animals, MacArthur Clark said that there had been a 2% drop in the overall number of procedures carried out in 2012, compared with 2011. She also said that no animals had been used to test household products, cosmetics or tobacco, in the previous year.

The number of mice accounted for 74% of the animals used in 2012. Fish accounted for 12% of the total, rats were 7% and the bird tally came to 4%.

MacArthur Clark said that the rise in non-human primates was due to their use in pharmaceutical research and development, particularly development of "biologicals".

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