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Sunday, June 6, 2021

Environmental Enrichment at UW Madison - pair housing macaques

Just about a month ago, I suggested that the University of Wisconsin might be in violation of the Animal Welfare Act because they had been dragging their feet for so long in providing me with copies of documents that they are required to have on hand and ready to be reviewed by a UDSA Animal Welfare inspector.

I wrote to the state Attorney General's Office about the length of time I had been waiting -- The AG's office says on its website that though there is no specified time requirement in the law, that two weeks is a reasonable amount of time. Within a few days I received the documents that I had been waiting 142 days for. The cover letter was undated; the records were made available to me on May 10, 2021 (see below). I asked for them on December 19, 2020.

Of the four documents I received, the pair housing exemption list provides the most insight into the living conditions of monkeys at the university. The NIH Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare booklet "Macaques," a part of it's series Enrichment for NonHuman Primates, says:
Because of the intrinsic social nature of macaques, pair or group housing of compatible animals is extremely important. It is well-known that raising a macaque alone, without the company of other macaques of the same species, will result in that animal expressing a pattern of abnormal behaviors that can become self-destructive. Even the behavior profiles of adult animals housed alone can degenerate into inciting these abnormal behaviors, which may include repeated pacing, circling, or somersaulting; hyper-aggression; depression; and self-injurious behavior, including hair plucking or self-biting.

Everyone even a tiny bit interested and even minimally informed seems to know that keeping macaques in cages by themselves is harmful to them. The effects seems to be significantly worse than keeping humans in solitary confinement. And yet, if I am reading the document correctly (there is no one to ask), on or about the day the document was printed, 67 macaques were in cages by themselves.

One female monkey, rh2347, was apparently moved to a cage with another monkey on February 25, 2021, afer 12 years of being alone.

Three monkeys have been cages alone since 2013. Six since 2014. Eleven since 2015.

The Wisconsin National Primate Research is a hideous place, all the monkey labs are. They all operate in pretty much the same way.
View Message

CC: lisa.hull@wisc.edu;
Subject: Rick Bogle Public Records Request :: P001468-121920
Body:
RE: PUBLIC RECORDS REQUEST of December 19, 2020.
Reference # P001468-121920.

Dear Requester:

I write in response to your request under the Wisconsin Public Records Law, Wisconsin Statutes §§19.31-19.39, dated December 19, 2020 for, “the university's primate psychological enhancement plan or (plans) and any exemptions that have been granted from January 1, 2020 to present. (For reference see 9 CFR § 3.81).”

Attached please find 33-pages of records in response to your request.

We have redacted or withheld the following categories of information for the reasons given below:

[blah, blah, blah...]

Sincerely,
Lynn Rusch
Senior Administrative Program Specialist
University of Wisconsin – Madison

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