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Insect euthanasia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Disposal of laboratory insects
Drosophila repleta

Insect euthanasia is the process of killinginsects "in a way that minimizes or eliminates pain and distress."[1]: 6  It may apply to animals in the laboratory, schools, as pets, as food, or otherwise.

Euthanasia of insects and other invertebrates has historically received limited attention.[1]: 75 [2] While vertebrate animal experimentation typically requires approval by anInstitutional Animal Care and Use Committee in the United States, use of invertebrate animals has few guidelines, and many research papers make no mention of how their invertebrate subjects were killed.[3]

Many of the euthanasia methods developed for vertebrates do not transfer well to invertebrates.[4] While a number of euthanasia methods have been proposed for various invertebrate taxa,[2][5] many have not been adequately vetted, and more research is needed.[6]

Uncertainty over insect sentience

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See also:Ethics of uncertain sentience

Scientists debate the existence and extent ofpain in invertebrates, including insects.[7]

Vincent Wigglesworth suggests giving insects the benefit of the doubt, in case they can suffer.[8] Cornelia Gunkel and Gregory A. Lewbart suggest that "Until the question of pain in invertebrates is clearly answered, an analgesic should be given to any animal that is subjected to a painful procedure."[5]Jeffrey A. Lockwood agrees:[9]

If we use anesthetic and it turns out that insects don’t experience pain, the material cost of our mistake is very low [...]. However, if we don’t use anesthetic and it turns out that the insects were in agony, then the moral cost of our mistake is quite high.

AVMA guidelines echo this perspective:[1]: 75–76 

While there is ongoing debate about invertebrates’ abilities to perceive pain or otherwise experience compromised welfare, the Guidelines assume that a conservative and humane approach to the care of any creature is warranted and expected by society. Consequently, euthanasia methods should be used that minimize the potential for pain or distress.

Laboratory euthanasia

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Recommended methods

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Pentobarbital overdose

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Pentobarbital is an anesthetic drug used in medicine, human and animal euthanasia, and capital punishment. AVMA recommends overdose of pentobarbital or similar drugs as a method of invertebrate euthanasia. The dose can be chosen at comparable levels as those given topoikilotherm vertebrates, adjusted proportionally to the animal's weight. Injection intohemolymph is ideal, but for invertebrates that have anopen circulatory system, "an intracoelomic injection" may be required rather than injection into blood vessels. It may help to premedicate the animal with another injected or inhaled drug.[1]: 76 

Verifying an insect's death from chemical injections is difficult, so it is often recommended to follow up anesthetic overdose with physical destruction.[2][5] Note that since insects have different nervous systems from vertebrates, decapitation alone may not always be sufficient to destroy neural function.[5]

Professor Peer Zwart has observed that commercial pentobarbital may have a pH between 9.5 and 11.0, which can coagulate the protein of snail hemocele. This might be painful to a live organism.[6]

Potassium chloride

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Potassium chloride (KCl) is one of the three drugs typically used inlethal injection in the United States. It causeshyperkalemia, which stops the heart by inducingdepolarization of cellular membrane potentials.Intravenous KCl injection is unacceptable for vertebrate animals unless they have been rendered unconscious by other means.[1]

Development on American lobster:

Andrea Battison and colleagues proposed KCl for euthanasia of theAmerican lobster.[3] The researchers injected KCl solution in order to fill with potassium ions (K+) the hemolymph sinus that holds the lobster'sventral nerve cord and the region around itssupraesophageal ganglion. In normal circumstances, neurons maintain a negativemembrane potential and have a high intracellular K+ concentration. When KCl is injected into hemolymph, extracellular K+ increases and begins to enter the neurons to restore equilibrium. This depolarizes the neurons and generates anaction potential. Subsequent repolarization is blocked by the high intracellular K+, so the nervous system fails, and transmission of adverse sensory information is prevented. The potassium then triggers cardiac arrest within 40–90 seconds, in both warm and cold environments.[3]

While intravenous KCl is not humane for vertebrates, the researchers in this study assume that in lobsters "disruption of theCNS, its ability to process and transmit sensory input, and loss of any awareness would be almost immediate" because the injection directly targets the lobster's "brain". KCl injection produced immediate extension of claws and legs due to deactivation of motor neurons, and the researchers assume that sensory neurons degraded in a similar fashion.[3]

The lethal dose for this procedure was rather high: 1 g KCl per 1 kg of body weight. This was 10–30 times more than the required dose for intravenous mammalian killing with KCl, and it may reflect the lobster's resilient physiology. Tissues were well preserved, except formyofiber damage at the injection site, which means this technique is generally suitable forhistology research.[3]

Extension to terrestrial arthropods:

Cockroach nymph

Neil A. C. Bennie and colleagues extended the technique of Battison et al. to arthropods likeBlaberus giganteus,Gryllus bimaculatus, andLocusta migratoria.[10] They produced a table of suggested injection sites and doses for ten orders of arthropods. The researchers propose the nametargeted hyperkalosis to describe the procedure of injecting a large dose of K+ to thethoracic ganglia. Advantages of this approach are that KCl is cheap, safe, does not need special storage, and preserves specimens for most research use cases except those that look at the neural culture itself. That said, the method is hard to use for small insects likeDrosophila sp.[10]

The recommended dose is 10% v/w 300 mg/ml KCl injected between the first pair of legs forBlattodea,Phasmida,Orthoptera,Mantodea,Coleoptera, andDiptera.[11]

Techniques requiring an adjunctive method of euthanasia

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Inhaled anesthetics

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Overdose on inhaled anesthetics can work for terrestrial invertebrates like insects, but verifying death can be difficult, so it is advised to use another euthanasia method alongside them.[1]: 76 Isoflurane andsevoflurane are examples of volatile anaesthetics that can be used; afterward, the insects should be mechanically destroyed such as by crushing.[11] Systems have been developed to provide vaporized anesthetic in the minimal required amounts in order to make anesthesia more cost-effective.[12]

Pithing

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Pithing requires sufficient anatomical experience with the relevant species. It is not humane on its own and should be preceded by other means of anaesthesia.[1]: 76 

Chemical

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Chemicals like alcohol andformalin can destroy nervous tissue but are not humane by themselves and should be preceded by other means of anaesthesia.[1]: 76  Ethyl Acetate (EtOAC) or Sodium Cyanide (NaCN) are and were commonly used field chemicals in conjunction with a kill jar for collecting insect specimens by many entomologists.[13]

Freezing

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Freezing is sometimes suggested as a method of insect euthanasia.[14] Others contend that freezing is not humane on its own but should be preceded by other means of anaesthesia.[1]: 76  Cold by itself does not produce analgesia.[5] Romain Pizzi suggests that freezing, while common in "hobbyist literature", will compromise tissues of spiders for later histopathological examination, but does not make any statement about its effect on spider wellbeing.[15]

TheBritish and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums (BIAZA) Terrestrial Invertebrate Working Group (TIWG) reports on a survey conducted by Mark Bushell of BIAZA institutions. He found that refrigeration and freezing were the most common methods "of euthanasia of invertebrates although research has suggested that this is probably one of the least ethical options." That said, freezing is a worst-case method if chemical or instantaneous physical destruction is not possible.[11]

Insects put in an ordinary freezer may require a day or more to be killed.[16]

Uncertain methods

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Carbon dioxide is sometimes used for terrestrial invertebrates, including insects.[17] However, its effectiveness is not known.[1]: 76  It has been reported to cause convulsions and excited behavior, perhaps suggesting animal discomfort. It is not believed to induce analgesia.[5]

John E. Cooper writes: "If a procedure is considered to be potentially painful, there may be merit in using isoflurane, halothane, or sevoflurane rather than CO2 because the extent to which the latter induces analgesia in invertebrates is not known, and its use in vertebrate animals is controversial because of concerns about its effects on the animals' health and welfare."[6]: 198 

Farm euthanasia

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Main article:Welfare of farmed insects

Some insect farmers believe that mechanical shredding is the least painful way to kill insects suitable for human consumption.[18] Freezing is also commonly used for commercialentomophagy operations, though as discussed above, there is debate over whether freezing is fully humane.

Many insects eaten by humans are roasted, fried, boiled, or otherwise heated directly, without any effort made at euthanasia. Many pets eat live insects, which cannot be euthanized.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^abcdefghij"AVMA Guidelines for the Euthanasia of Animals: 2013 Edition"(PDF). American Veterinary Medical Association. Retrieved12 May 2014.
  2. ^abcMurray, Michael J. (2006). "Appendix 3: Euthanasia". In Gregory A. Lewbart (ed.).Invertebrate Medicine. Blackwell Publishing. pp. 303–304.doi:10.1002/9780470344606.app3.ISBN 9780470344606.
  3. ^abcdeBattison, A.; MacMillan, R.; MacKenzie, A.; Rose, P.; Cawthorn, R.; Horney, B. (Oct 2000)."Use of Injectable Potassium Chloride for Euthanasia of American Lobsters (Homarus americanus)".Comparative Medicine.50 (5):545–550.PMID 11099140. Retrieved12 May 2014.
  4. ^Crook, Robyn J. (Feb 2013)."The welfare of invertebrate animals in research: Can science's next generation improve their lot?"(PDF).Journal of Postdoctoral Research.1 (2): 9‐20.doi:10.14304/surya.jpr.v1n2.2.
  5. ^abcdefCornelia Gunkel; Gregory A. Lewbart (2007). "13. Invertebrates". In Gary West; Darryl Heard; Nigel Caulkett (eds.).Zoo Animal & Wildlife Immobilization and Anesthesia. Blackwell. pp. 147–158.ISBN 978-0-8138-2566-3.
  6. ^abcCooper, John E. (2011)."Anesthesia, analgesia, and euthanasia of invertebrates".ILAR Journal.52 (2):196–204.doi:10.1093/ilar.52.2.196.PMID 21709312.
  7. ^Sherwin, C.M. (2001). "Can invertebrates suffer? Or, how robust is argument-by-analogy?".Animal Welfare (Supplement).10: 103–S118.
  8. ^Wigglesworth, Vincent B. (1980). "Do insects feel pain?".Antenna:8–9.
  9. ^Lockwood, Jeff (25 Nov 2011)."Do bugs feel pain?".OUPblog. Retrieved2 June 2014.
  10. ^abBennie, Neil A. C.; Christopher D. Loaring; Mikaella M. G. Bennie; Steven A. Trim (2012)."An effective method for terrestrial arthropod euthanasia".Journal of Experimental Biology.215 (24):4237–4241.doi:10.1242/jeb.074997.PMID 22996446.
  11. ^abcSarah Pellett; Romain Pizzi; Steven Trim; Mark Bushell; Dave Clarke; Jamie Wood (Jun 2015).BIAZA Recommendations for Ethical Euthanasia of Invertebrates (2.6 ed.). British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums.
  12. ^A. Walcourt; D. Ide (Oct 1998)."A system for the delivery of general anesthetics and other volatile agents to the fruit-fly Drosophila melanogaster".J Neurosci Methods.84 (1–2):115–119.doi:10.1016/s0165-0270(98)00105-8.PMID 9821642.S2CID 3809817.
  13. ^"Collecting and Preserving Insects : Entomology : Environmental & Earth Science : Projects & Resources : Minnesota 4-H : Youth Development : University of Minnesota Extension". Archived fromthe original on 2014-10-02. Retrieved2014-06-03.
  14. ^"Euthanizing Insects". Colorado Plateau Biodiversity Center. 6 Aug 2012. Retrieved31 May 2014.
  15. ^Pizzi, Romain (2012). "Spiders". In Gregory A. Lewbart (ed.).Invertebrate Medicine (2nd ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. p. 211.ISBN 978-0813817583.
  16. ^Hahn, Jeffrey."Collecting and preserving insects".University of Minnesota Extension. Archived fromthe original on 2 October 2014. Retrieved3 June 2014.
  17. ^Steven M. Valles; Philip G. Koehler (June 1994). "Influence of Carbon Dioxide Anesthesia on Chlorpyrifos Toxicity in the German Cockroach (Dictyoptera: Blattellidae)".Journal of Economic Entomology.87 (3):709–713.doi:10.1093/jee/87.3.709.PMID 7517968.
  18. ^Erens, Jesse; Es van, Sam; Haverkort, Fay; Kapsomenou, Eleni; Luijben, Andy (2012)."A bug's life: Large-scale insect rearing in relation to animal welfare"(PDF). Wageningen University. Retrieved13 May 2014.
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