Are Monkeys at Bioculture Infected With the Novel Coronavirus? PETA Demands Documentation
Suspend All Experiments, Group Says; Monkeys’ Exposure to Virus Will Affect Future Experiments
For Immediate Release:
April 28, 2020
Contact:
Tasgola Bruner 202-483-7382
Humans aren’t the only primates who can be infected with the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19. That’s why PETA is calling on Bioculture to suspend all experiments and provide documentation that the monkeys housed there, as well as its staff, have not been exposed to or infected with the coronavirus. Because the virus affects monkeys differently from humans, they aren’t good “models” for studying the human form of the disease—and if any of the monkeys are infected, future studies involving them would be compromised.
“We are deeply concerned that in the face of a global pandemic—the very reason that primate experimenters claim to need to cage and maintain 100,000-plus primates in laboratories—Bioculture may not be able to show that the monkeys it imprisons and the humans it employs haven’t been exposed to COVID-19,” says PETA veterinarian Dr. Ingrid Taylor.
Bioculture captures monkeys from their homes in nature, imprisons them in cages, and then sells their offspring for use in painful and deadly experiments. At its facility in Florida, the monkeys are kept confined to unhygienic open-air cages outdoors.
PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to experiment on”—opposes speciesism, which is a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please visit PETA.org.
PETA’s letter to Bioculture is available here.