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Showing posts with label Children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children. Show all posts

Monday, 31 October 2011

Lab Animals

Long time no type!


Hey everyone :-) 
Rachel is back in the house. Sorry I haven't posted in a while : exams : homework and loads more excuses :O But today I wanted to talk about Laboratory Animals. 


Animal testing, also known as animal experimentationanimal research, and in vivo testing, is the use of non-human animals in experiments. Worldwide it is estimated that the number of vertebrate animals—from zebrafish to non-human primates—ranges from the tens of millions to more than 100 million used annually. Invertebrates, mice, rats, birds, fish, frogs, and animals not yet weaned are not included in the figures; one estimate of mice and rats used in the United States alone in 2001 was 80 million.Most animals are euthanized after being used in an experiment. Sources of laboratory animals vary between countries and species; most animals are purpose-bred, while others are caught in the wild or supplied by dealers who obtain them from auctions and pounds.

History.

As the experimentation on animals increased, especially the practice of vivisection, so did criticism and controversy. In 1655, the advocate of Galenic physiology Edmund O'Meara said that "the miserable torture of vivisection places the body in an unnatural state."O'Meara and others argued that animal physiology could be affected by pain during vivisection, rendering results unreliable. There were also objections on an ethical basis, contending that the benefit to humans di not justify the harm to animals. Early objections to animal testing also came from another angle — many people believed that animals were inferior to humans and so different that results from animals could not be applied to humans.

On the other side of the debate, those in favor of animal testing held that experiments on animals were necessary to advance medical and biological knowledge. Claude Bernard, known as the "prince of vivisectors" and the father of physiology—whose wife, Marie Françoise Martin, founded the first anti-vivisection society in France in 1883—famously wrote in 1865 that "the science of life is a superb and dazzlingly lighted hall which may be reached only by passing through a long and ghastly kitchen". Arguing that "experiments on animals ... are entirely conclusive for the toxicology and hygiene of man...the effects of these substances are the same on man as on animals, save for differences in degree," Bernard established animal experimentation as part of the standard scientific method.






This is Claude Bernard - 










Numbers 


Accurate global figures for animal testing are difficult to obtain. The British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV) estimates that 100 million vertebrates are experimented on around the world every year, 10–11 million of them in the European Union. The Nuffield Council on Bioethics reports that global annual estimates range from 50 to 100 million animals. None of the figures include invertebrates such as shrimp and fruit flies. Animals bred for research then killed as surplus, animals used for breeding purposes, and animals not yet weaned are also not included in the figures.








Housing 








What it does to animals - 







Thanks everyone for listening :-)
The more people aware the less the probelm.

Rachel♥ 

Sunday, 2 October 2011

How animals save humans

Today I was watching "Wierd or what?". I thought that all this time Rach and I talk about what we should do for animals and the enviroment but we never talk about what nature does for us.

1. Simple but true : clean water.
2. Food
3. Homes
4. air
                Now some more interesting things:
5. Have you ever heard of dolphins saving humans?
     Dolphins are known to be more clever than gorrilas.
     They can recognise them selfs in a mirror.
     Save humans, thats right!!!
If you watch tv you might of heard of Flippo the dolphin that saved a drowning 14 year old boy when he fell of his dad's boat or
a man called Todd saved by dolphins from a shark attack.

6. Binti Jua and Jambo are gorrilas from to diffrent zoos but they show a similar behaviour. THEY BOTH SAVED A CHILD!!!
a) Binty Jua saved a 3 year old boy that fell into her enclouser. She protected the child from other primates and handed it over to the zoo keeper.
b) Jambo did the same thing but he was a male and carried a 5 year old to the zookeeper.

7. Cats and dogs save humans and even do they are not wild they have wild cousins we should respect.   
                                                                                        next time we will talk about illegal markets
                                                                                         looking for your animal stories your Marta