Exposed: Ex-racehorses and Dartmoor ponies used in experiments
Horses purchased from private owners for UK laboratories
We’ve today exposed that Dartmoor and Welsh Mountain ponies and former racing horses have been used in experiments by UK laboratories in recent years.
We’ve also found evidence that horses purchased from private owners, including a farmer, have ended up in experiments.
In 2014, 8,079 experiments were completed on horses and ponies. 187 animals were used for the first time. There are no restrictions on where laboratories can source their horses and ponies to be used in experiments.
Some of the research has been funded by the Horserace Betting Levy Board.
Many horses are kept in laboratories for years and are repeatedly blood sampled to produce biological materials like serum. Other horses are used for basic research.
At least five UK laboratories have carried out experiments on horses or ponies in recent years:
- University of Cambridge
- Royal Veterinary College
- Animal Health Trust
- University of Bristol
- University of Liverpool
- compressing umbilical cords or cutting umbilical vessels during pregnancy so that unborn foals do not receive enough nutrients
- surgically removing glands
- injecting the animals with hormones or drugs that affect growth and metabolism