PETITION CLOSED

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Please Sign for the Immediate release of the 140 chimpanzees at the NIRC in Louisiana.
  1. Signatures
    252 out of 500
    Petitioning
    1. Acting Director / National Center for Research Resources (+ 2 others)
      Petitioning
      close
      • Acting Director / National Center for Research Resources (Dr. Barbara M. Alving)
      • President / University of Louisiana, Lafayette (Dr. Ray Authement)
      • DVM, Director (Thomas J Rowell)
  2. Created By
    r s
    holmen, WI










Stop Animal Exploitation NOW!
S. A. E. N.
"Exposing the truth to wipe out animal experimentation"




 New Iberia, Louisiana (affiliated with University of Louisiana at Lafayette)




Approximate Number of Chimpanzees: 325



History & Profile

New Iberia Research Center (NIRC) is the largest holding of captive primates in the world, and is owned and operated by the University of Louisiana at Lafayette (UL Lafayette). NIRC is composed of five major divisions: Division of Research Resources, Division of Veterinary Sciences, Division of Animal Resources, Division of Behavioral Sciences, and Division of Occupational Services.




NIRC “operates from a 100-acre site with 24 buildings totaling 485,000 square feet,” and the indoor space includes a 12,000-square-foot diagnostic laboratory. (1)  “The Division of Animal Resources maintains husbandry and housing responsibilities for over 6,000 nonhuman primates representing eight species.” (2)  The National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) reports that NIRC breeds the following species of nonhuman primates: chimpanzee, vervet monkey, cynomolgus macaque, pigtailed macaque, and rhesus macaque. (3)  On New Iberia’s Web site they note breeding capuchin monkeys as well. (4) For chimpanzees, NIRC still receives federal funding to maintain the capabilities for breeding them. According to recent government records, received by Stop Animal Exploitation Now (SAEN), NIRC receives over $6.1 million per year for the maintenance of their more than 6,000 primates. (5) 




(Click here to read more about the moratorium and breeding of chimpanzees for research.)




NIRC claims that it has given much attention to the development of “suitable” living quarters for nonhuman primates at the facility. (6)  NIRC was formerly known as the Gulf South Research Institute (GSRI), which began the Life Science Division at the site. The division focused primarily on rodent animal models but some primates were housed there as well.
“In 1984, GSRI discontinued its biological research activities and UL Lafayette (then the University of Southwestern Louisiana) redefined the nature of the facility and created the New Iberia Research Center, operating a Primate Research Center as a contract support facility.” (7)




In the 1980s, “the primary focus of [NIRC] was to provide private industry and the federal government with a reliable source of native born, quality bred nonhuman primates.” (8) In 1990, NIRC “expanded its mission by providing pre-clinical safety, pharmacodynamic, pharmacokinetic, and efficacy evaluations of pharmaceuticals and biotechnology products.” (9)




Maternal separation/deprivation experiments were conducted on chimpanzees by G. Berkson and W.A. Mason at this facility. (10)



Chimpanzee Use

Nonhuman primates at NIRC are used for vaccine development and pharmaceutical testing. NIRC maintains and provides “a ready source of chimpanzees of mixed ages and sex for use in biomedical and behavioral sciences…” (11) The center “specializes in the breeding, management and importation of a diverse range of nonhuman primate species…” (12)



Research Profile*

Principal Research Programs:



Breeding and supply of various speciesPhysiological and pharmacological evaluationChronic and degenerative disease studiesVaccine development efficacy and safety testingComparative cognitive development

* These research programs may involve primates other than chimpanzees.



Financials/Grants

NIRC receives grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for chimpanzee research, housing and maintenance. 




For grant 5U42RR015087 titled the “Establishment/Maintenance of Biomedical Research Colony,” over $10 million has been awarded to NIRC since the project began in September 2000. The grant is scheduled to continue through August 2011. NIRC has also received over $7 million for a contract entitled the “Leasing of Chimpanzees for the Conduct of Research.” The contract, N01-A0-22754, started in September 2002 and is scheduled to continue through September 2012. (13)




Resources and Links




Chimpanzees at New Iberia Research Center




 The use of chimpanzees in experimentation is one of our nation’s least-known tragedies. These intelligent primates who share most of our DNA often respond psychologically to the barren captivity of the laboratory by exhibiting stereotypical behavior. They also suffer terribly in research involving diseases such as hepatitis and HIV. Over 1300 chimps are held captive in U.S. labs.




Perhaps the most significant part of this tragedy depends on the lifespan of the chimpanzee species. In captivity chimpanzees can live up to 60 years. One of the NIRC chimps, Karen, is listed with a date of 1958. This unfortunate animal has spent over 47 years imprisoned within animal labs. The heartbreak of this situation is something that we cannot fully understand.




Many of the chimps at the NIRC were wild-caught. This means that at one point in their lives they lived in their natural habitat. This must be a painful memory for them. Their longing for freedom must be intense.




It is not surprising that many captive primates, chimps and other species, lose their minds. I cannot imagine facing the daily reality of imprisonment within a place like the NIRC. As of now the only release for these innocent victims is in death.




We MUST win their freedom!




Please contact these officials to demand the release of the NIRC Chimps:




Please write to these officials to demand the immediate retirement to sanctuaries of the 140 chimpanzees who are part of the Chimpanzee Breeding and Research Program at the New Iberia Research Center in Louisiana.




 http://www.hsus.org/animals_in_research/animals_in_research_news/undercover_investigation_reveals_chimpanzee_abuse.html

Recent Signatures

Release All Chimpanzees!

Dear Sir / Madame

A nine-month-long undercover investigation by The HSUS has exposed the mistreatment of nearly 300 chimpanzees and other primates at the New Iberia Research Center (NIRC) in Louisiana. These chimps, living lives of deprivation and misery, are among the more than 1,000 chimps languishing in laboratories across the United States. Chimps, our closet genetic relative, are complex, social, and long-lived creatures. Many chimps currently warehoused in research facilities have lived for decades behind bars. Especially heartbreaking are stories of the 26 elder chimps at NIRC, who were taken from their mothers in the wild.

ABC News: Nightline, World News Tonight, and Good Morning America aired the story of the more than 300 chimpanzees at the New Iberia Research Center (NIRC) in Louisiana. The footage of NIRC was taken from a nine-month-long undercover investigation by The Humane Society of the United States.</p>




<p>Among these chimps are 26 elders who were taken decades ago from the wild. It's time to give these animals the sanctuary they deserve.</p>




<p>At any given time, the vast majority of chimpanzees in laboratories are simply being warehoused, and not actually used in research. The approximately $20-25 million in taxpayer dollars per year spent to house, care for, and experiment on this endangered species could be better spent on other, more useful research endeavors.</p>




<p>I am very concerned about the use of these endangered animals for research which causes them considerable harm. In addition to being highly social and emotional beings, chimpanzees have been shown to have amazing mental abilities such as tool use and problem solving skills. Given what we know about them, confinement in a laboratory is simply no place for a chimpanzee.</p>




<p>The United States is the only country, besides Gabon, that still uses chimpanzees in invasive research. The United Kingdom, Japan, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Austria, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Spain have all banned or severely restricted the use of chimpanzees. Please help the U.S. join this list of nations by co-sponsoring The Great Ape Protection Act.</p>




<p>Thank you.

[Your name]