From Alan Festo, Gainesville Sun, November 27, 2023
Stop Animal Exploitation Now!, or SAEN, a nonprofit watchdog group that
monitors U.S. research facilities for fraud and illegal activities, is also
calling on Sasse to ban all UF staff involved with the project from working
with animals in the future.
The research in question dates back to June 12, when 14 rats were dosed with
glyphosate — an herbicide — and then subjected to 95-degree heat for eight
hours. After the study, six of the rats were found dead
Lab failed to "monitor the real-time temperature" of 3 of 6 dead animals
A letter dated July 20, from David Norton, UF's vice president of research,
to Axel Wolff, director of the Division of Compliance Oversight for the
Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare, part of the National Institutes of
Health, states the lab failed to "monitor the real-time temperature" of
three of the six dead animals as required under UF's Institutional Animal
Care and Use Committee (IACUC) protocol.
"This botched project clearly demonstrates the incompetence of UF’s lab
staff which the animals have paid for with their lives," wrote SAEN
Executive Director Michael Budkie in his letter to Sasse. "Glyphosate is a
serious environmental problem, but that will not be solved by poisoning
animals under artificial conditions in a laboratory setting."
Committee initiates 3 corrective actions
The IACUC full committee initiated three corrective actions as a result of
the deaths, including administering a lower dose of glyphosate and less heat
exposure, working with the software manufacturer on continuous monitoring
access, and creating a checklist to ensure protocols are followed
UF committed to "ethical use of animals" in medical research
As in past responses to The Sun regarding animal research complaints, Steve
Orlando, UF spokesman and associate vice president of communications, said
in an email that UF "is committed to the ethical use of animals in its
pursuit of medical advances that benefit both humans and animals."
"Almost every drug, treatment, medical device, diagnostic tool or cure we
have today was developed with the help of laboratory animals," the statement
continued. "Animal research at UF is governed by a federally mandated
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee that reviews all requests for
approval to use vertebrate animals and inspects all areas where animals are
housed and used."
UF's Animal Care and Use program fully accredited
University officials say its Animal Care and Use program has received full
and continued accreditation from AAALAC International, a nonprofit that
promotes the humane treatment of animals in science.
Past complaints
SAEN's past complaints about animal research at UF include the deaths of two
dogs that were part of a Duchenne muscular dystrophy study in mid-2022, and
a dosing error that led to eight rats either dying or being euthanized.