Each center breeds and experiments on thousands of monkeys, mostly macaques. You’ve probably seen images of monkeys being kept in small sterile stainless steel cages for experiments that can last months or even years.
- Most of the animals at the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center were only known by their tattoo numbers, a PETA investigator noted during a six-month undercover NPRC investigation. Monkey r12001, pictured here, suffered from chronic diarrhea for six years.
The monkeys kept at the NPRC were deprived of communication, and knowing who their friends are and who they can turn to for support is of paramount importance to the monkeys, as is the ability to make decisions for themselves. They have no control over their lives and cannot raise children who are forcibly divorced.
While the NPRC couple have open areas where breeders are kept, babies and adolescents are taken away from their mothers during the first yearcausing unbearable torment. The constant movement of monkeys into and out of these laboratory breeding pens often results in gruesome injuries and even infant deaths. Once removed, the young monkeys are used in experiments that are invasive, painful, excruciating, and very often deadly.
- At the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center, some babies (including the Turnip and Cora pictured here) were housed in a gloomy basement. Cora’s mother was reportedly killed in an experimental caesarean section.