Harvest of shame: dissection's deadly toll hits frogs hardest.For most high school students, dissecting a formaldehyde-soaked frog is an educational rite of passage rite of passage n. A ritual or ceremony signifying an event in a person's life indicative of a transition from one stage to another, as from adolescence to adulthood. . But the practice has decimated the population of frogs and other wild-caught animals, and more and more kids are refusing to do it. "I don't think it's right to kill animals" says Amanda Swann, a Missouri eighth grader who belongs to the Connecticut-based Kids in Nature's Defense. In Santa Monica, California For other uses, see Santa Monica (disambiguation). Santa Monica is a coastal city in western Los Angeles County, California, USA. Situated on Santa Monica Bay of the Pacific Ocean, it is surrounded by the City of Los Angeles — Pacific Palisades and Brentwood on the north, , middle school kids formed their own group, Students for the Rights of Animals rights of animals see animal rights. , and took their protest against dissection right to the school principal. Approximately 10 to 12 million animals are killed for dissection exercises every year in the United States, says Dr. Jonathan Balcombe, an associate director of education at the Humane Society of the U.S. (HSUS HSUS Humane Society of the United States ). "Of these animals, I estimate that 99 percent are wild caught," says Balcombe. Commonly dissected wild-caught animals include seven million vertebrates like frogs, turtles and sharks, and countless in vertebrates like grasshoppers Grasshoppers may refer to one of the following:
The cutting open of dead organisms for educational study, dissection has been taught in the U.S. for more than 150 years. The use of frogs as a classroom mainstay began more than 50 years ago, says Dr. E Barbara Orlans, a physiologist at Georgetown University. Today, it is estimated that approximately 75 to 80 percent of the nation's four million high school students will dissect dissect /dis·sect/ (di-sekt´) (di-sekt´) 1. to cut apart, or separate. 2. to expose structures of a cadaver for anatomical study. dis·sect v. at least one animal, and the practice is even moving into elementary schools. Bullfrogs and leopard frogs are the main victims. Since biological supply companies have been unable to breed frogs in a cost-effective manner, they rely upon an international network of harvesters and distributors for their wares. Harvesters often capture frogs when the animals are crossing fields. The harvesters shuffle through the grass, causing their prey to move, then capture them by hand or with specially-adapted nets. The massive collecting of frogs has depleted many local populations, leading some states--and some countries--to outlaw their commercial harvesting. It's illegal to hunt certain species of frogs for dissection in Canada, Michigan and Wisconsin. In Alberta, Canada, the northern leopard frog The Northern Leopard Frog(Lithobates pipiens[1][2], previously Rana pipiens) is a species of Leopard frog from the true frog family native to parts of Canada and United States. It is the State Amphibian of Minnesota and Vermont. became so rare that the government distributed "Wanted" posters asking, "Have you seen this frog?" Today, most frogs captured for dissection here are collected in the U.S., in Canada, in Mexico's coastal plains, and as far away as Africa and Indonesia. The harvesting has contributed to some frogs' precipitous population &dine. Additional factors in&de habitat loss, manmade pollution, and humans' appetite for frogs' legs. Unfortunately, the frogs' slow demise doesn't get the media attention accorded to the plight of charismatic wild animals like elephants and tigers. But the effects may be long-lasting. Froglog, a publication of the international Union for the Conservation of Nature International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) or World Conservation Union, international organization founded in 1948 to encourage the preservation of wildlife, natural environments, and living resources. , notes the plight of the Canadian bullfrog bullfrog, common name of the largest North American frog, Rana catesbeiana. Native to the E United States, this species has been successfully introduced in the West and in other parts of the world. The body length is 4 to 8 in. , millions of which were sold to U.S. biological supply houses until die-offs were first noted in 1975. "In the middle 1970s, the famous Manitoba frog holes were empty, and despite an eight-year ban on picking frogs, their numbers have not much increased" the magazine says. The environmental cost includes disruption of the local food chain, too. "Frogs are a keystone species," says Balcome. "Other organisms feed on them and they feed on other organisms. Remove the frogs from the equation and it's going to knock a link out of the food chain, or seriously weaken it." Animal dissection is, however, a deeply entrenched en·trench also in·trench v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es v.tr. 1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending. 2. and well-defended component of biology education. "We take a strong pro-dissection stance," says Wayne Carley, executive director of the influential National Association of Biology Teachers (NABT NABT National Association of Biology Teachers ). The NABT's position paper on the use of animals in biology asserts that "no alternative can substitute for the actual experience of dissection," and it urges teachers to be aware of the limitations of alternatives. Fortunately, the number of frog-friendly alternatives to animal dissection has skyrocketed this decade. Typically, humane alternatives include videotapes, three-dimensional anatomical models, pictorial atlases, and interactive CD-ROMs. Digital Frog teaches frog anatomy and dissection; its Ecology Module also has thousands of facts about animal behavior, diversity and life cycles. This CD-ROM CD-ROM: see compact disc. CD-ROM in full compact disc read-only memory Type of computer storage medium that is read optically (e.g., by a laser). and hundreds of other alternatives are described in Beyond Dissection: Innovative Tools for Biology Education, a comprehensive catalog of humane choices available from the Ethical Science Education Coalition. Besides saving countless animal lives, alternatives are also more cost-effective, claim proponents. According to HSUS, switching from bullfrog dissections to alternatives saves a high school a total of $379.25 over a three-year period. In addition, many of the alternatives, unlike live specimens, offer the ecological advantage of being reusable. HSUS and other animal protection groups actually offer these non-lethal materials in a free or nominal cost loan program. During the last decade, an unprecedented number of high school students have objected to animal dissection, and California, Florida, Maryland, New York Maryland is a town in Otsego County, New York, United States. The population was 1,920 at the 2000 census. The Town of Maryland is on the county's south border, and was named for the U.S. state of the same name. , Pennsylvania and Rhode Island have enacted legislation protecting a student's right to forgo it. For students troubled by the legal implications of taking such a stand, there's Vivisection vivisection (vĭv'ĭsĕk`shən), dissection of living animals for experimental purposes. The use of the term in recent years has been expanded to include all experimentation on living animals, rather than just dissection alone. and Dissection in the Classroom: A Guide to Conscientious Objection by Gary Francione and Anna Charlton. CONTACT: American Anti-Vivisection Society, 801 Old York Road, #204, Jenkintown, PA 19046-1685/(800)SAYAAVS; Ethical Science Education Coalition, 167 Milk Street, Suite 423, Boston, MA 02109/(617)367-9143; HSUS, 2100 L Street NW, Washington, DC 20037/(202) 452-1100. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion