Handbook of Primate Husbandry and Welfare
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Ethical concerns in primate use and husbandry.
Subsequent to World War II, a dramatic increase occurred in the utilization of nonhuman primates in biomedical and psychological research and industry. At the same time field studies on the ecological and social behavior of natural populations of primates also increased, making possible more realistic assessments of both the behavioral potentiality of primate populations and their conservation ...
متن کاملSession VIII-1a: Non-human primate use and welfare
For 10 years the NC3Rs has led the application of the 3Rs to nonhuman primate (NHP) research. Working with the pharmaceutical industry, we have identified opportunities to reduce NHP use in studies of abuse potential, assessment of candidate therapeutics, and testing of monoclonal antibodies. Our guidelines on NHP accommodation, care and use, adopted by the major UK public funders of bioscience...
متن کاملThe Principles of Poultry Husbandry
There are a number of requirements by which animals should be managed so that the best performance is achieved in a way acceptable to those responsible for the care of the animals and to the community generally. These requirements are the keys to good management and may be used to test the management of a poultry enterprise in relation to the standard of its management. These requirements are a...
متن کاملKey features of 'environmental fit' that promote good animal welfare in different husbandry systems.
In animal production there are two core dimensions to environmental fit, one that centres on the capacity of the environment to meet an animal's needs and the other concerns the capacity of the animal to match or 'fit' the environment. Efforts to increase capacity in both of these dimensions can contribute substantially to the continuous improvement of animal welfare within different livestock ...
متن کاملPrimate Welfare Meeting 29 November 2011 Central London
Can facial expressions be used for pain assessment in macaques? Professor Paul Flecknell, Newcastle University, UK Our current ability to assess pain in non-human primates is very limited. Similar problems occur in other species of animals, but over the last decade behaviour-based pain assessment systems have been developed for a range of companion, farm and laboratory species. In contrast, the...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Journal of Wildlife Diseases
سال: 2007
ISSN: 0090-3558
DOI: 10.7589/0090-3558-43.3.560