New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation Managers

The Earth’s biodiversity is in crisis. Without radical action to conserve habitats, the current rate of species extinction is predicted to accelerate even further. Efficient species conservation requires planning, management, and continuous biodiversity monitoring through wildlife research. Conserva...

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Main Author: Miriam A. Zemanova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Conservation
Subjects:
3Rs
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7159/1/2/9
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spelling doaj-537a1badcefb437299ace3b4532ff7592021-09-09T13:41:26ZengMDPI AGConservation2673-71592021-06-011910611210.3390/conservation1020009New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation ManagersMiriam A. Zemanova0Centre for Compassionate Conservation, University of Technology Sydney, Ultimo, NSW 2007, AustraliaThe Earth’s biodiversity is in crisis. Without radical action to conserve habitats, the current rate of species extinction is predicted to accelerate even further. Efficient species conservation requires planning, management, and continuous biodiversity monitoring through wildlife research. Conservation biology was built on the utilitarian principle, where the well-being of species, populations, and ecosystems is given priority over the well-being of individual animals. However, this tenet has been increasingly under discussion and it has been argued that wildlife researchers need to safeguard the welfare of the individual animals traditionally subjected to invasive or lethal research procedures. The 3Rs principles of animal use (Replacement, Reduction, and Refinement) have become the cornerstone of ethical scientific conduct that could minimize the potential negative impact of research practices. One of the obvious strategies to implement the 3Rs in wildlife studies is to use non-invasive or non-lethal research methods. However, in contrast to toxicological or pharmacological research on laboratory animal models, up to now no 3Rs databases or online resources designed specifically for wildlife biologists, ecologists, and conservation managers have been available. To aid the implementation of the 3Rs principles into research on wildlife, I developed an online resource whose structure is outlined in this paper. The website contains a curated database of peer-reviewed articles that have implemented non-invasive or non-lethal research methods that could be used as a guideline for future studies.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7159/1/2/93Rsdatabasenon-invasive samplingnon-lethal samplingwebsitewildlife welfare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miriam A. Zemanova
spellingShingle Miriam A. Zemanova
New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation Managers
Conservation
3Rs
database
non-invasive sampling
non-lethal sampling
website
wildlife welfare
author_facet Miriam A. Zemanova
author_sort Miriam A. Zemanova
title New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation Managers
title_short New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation Managers
title_full New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation Managers
title_fullStr New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation Managers
title_full_unstemmed New Online Resource on the 3Rs Principles of Animal Research for Wildlife Biologists, Ecologists, and Conservation Managers
title_sort new online resource on the 3rs principles of animal research for wildlife biologists, ecologists, and conservation managers
publisher MDPI AG
series Conservation
issn 2673-7159
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The Earth’s biodiversity is in crisis. Without radical action to conserve habitats, the current rate of species extinction is predicted to accelerate even further. Efficient species conservation requires planning, management, and continuous biodiversity monitoring through wildlife research. Conservation biology was built on the utilitarian principle, where the well-being of species, populations, and ecosystems is given priority over the well-being of individual animals. However, this tenet has been increasingly under discussion and it has been argued that wildlife researchers need to safeguard the welfare of the individual animals traditionally subjected to invasive or lethal research procedures. The 3Rs principles of animal use (Replacement, Reduction, and Refinement) have become the cornerstone of ethical scientific conduct that could minimize the potential negative impact of research practices. One of the obvious strategies to implement the 3Rs in wildlife studies is to use non-invasive or non-lethal research methods. However, in contrast to toxicological or pharmacological research on laboratory animal models, up to now no 3Rs databases or online resources designed specifically for wildlife biologists, ecologists, and conservation managers have been available. To aid the implementation of the 3Rs principles into research on wildlife, I developed an online resource whose structure is outlined in this paper. The website contains a curated database of peer-reviewed articles that have implemented non-invasive or non-lethal research methods that could be used as a guideline for future studies.
topic 3Rs
database
non-invasive sampling
non-lethal sampling
website
wildlife welfare
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-7159/1/2/9
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