Dave Weldon
Avid Member
Howdy All,
I remembered that Dr. Frances Baines (one of our forum members and on the team that created the UVB UK Site ) had authored a paper on reptile euthanasia. I contacted her about the article and got permission to post it.
Also, in addition to the PDF attached at the bottom of this post, here are some excerpts from some more of her thoughts on the subject:
"This is an excellent summary of the position today regarding the use of CO2 gas for euthanasia:
The report from the 2006 Newcastle Consensus Meeting on Carbon Dioxide Euthanasia of Laboratory Animals
http://www.nc3rs.org.uk/downloaddoc.asp?id=416&page=292&skin=0
I am in the very fortunate position of being a qualified vet, and therefore for many years I have held a very small personal supply of pentobarbitone sodium for the humane euthanasia of wildlife brought to me dying (I worked as a volunteer in hedgehog rescue for a while and local people sometimes bring me some poor squashed creatures from the roadside) and for my own reptiles should the need ever arise.
I feel very strongly indeed that this is by far the most humane method of euthanasia and I have used it with several terminally ill leopard geckos on a couple of occasions over the years (I keep these as pets, and breed from two pairs each year). Even though the texts say it can take 10 - 15 minutes to achieve unconsciousness, I have never known it take more than a minute or two, even when given into the coelom. It can be almost instantaneous. The secret is to give enough. The drug itself is very, very cheap and I think there is no excuse for a vet not to give a massive overdose; maybe 10 times what would be needed to kill the reptile. That way, huge amounts reach the brain very quickly and the animal becomes unconscious really fast.
However, for tiny babies the needle itself is large in comparison, and I may be "soft" but I cannot stab a little hatchling in its belly with a hypodermic needle. I am certain this would cause pain and terror. Very, very rarely (maybe once every couple of years) an abnormal baby hatches out and I no longer try to "save" these - they rarely thrive as adults and no-one wants to buy them anyway. So, I don't inject these tiny creatures. Although I find this very unpleasant and I have to summon up courage to do it, I use the "instantaneous destruction of the brain" method described in the article, which basically means placing the baby on a flat concrete surface and completely destroying the entire head in a fraction of a second with one swift (heartbreaking) blow with the side of a housebrick.
I do understand the problems facing breeders who may need to euthanase a number of animals too large to be killed in this way, but who don't want to spend the large amounts of money charged by a veterinarian for a consultation/injection/carcase disposal etc. In that case it might be possible for them to negotiate some sort of special rate for the process, whereby there is minimal consultation, merely signing of consent forms etc? I'm sure many vets would be prepared to discuss such a thing.
If you own a pet reptile, though, then if you do care for your pet, it is your responsibility to be certain you don't cause it pain. I do believe, if it is anything other than a very small baby, and/or you are uncertain whether its head is going to be completely destroyed first time, however inexperienced you are... then you need a vet to give it a massive overdose of pentobarbitone sodium. Because this is a controlled drug, at present this is the only way to get it done.
I would plead with people not to consider suffocating them, gassing them, drowning them, freezing them, or chopping their heads off whilst leaving the brain intact....Reptile brains are like ours, as far as we know, in their ability to experience pain, but very, very different to ours in their ability to survive torture which would render a mammal unconscious very quickly indeed. The only way to be sure a reptile is killed humanely is, as I said in the article, to destroy its brain instantaneously ... or to anaesthetise it first, and then destroy its brain in any method that might take a bit longer."
I remembered that Dr. Frances Baines (one of our forum members and on the team that created the UVB UK Site ) had authored a paper on reptile euthanasia. I contacted her about the article and got permission to post it.
Also, in addition to the PDF attached at the bottom of this post, here are some excerpts from some more of her thoughts on the subject:
"This is an excellent summary of the position today regarding the use of CO2 gas for euthanasia:
The report from the 2006 Newcastle Consensus Meeting on Carbon Dioxide Euthanasia of Laboratory Animals
http://www.nc3rs.org.uk/downloaddoc.asp?id=416&page=292&skin=0
I am in the very fortunate position of being a qualified vet, and therefore for many years I have held a very small personal supply of pentobarbitone sodium for the humane euthanasia of wildlife brought to me dying (I worked as a volunteer in hedgehog rescue for a while and local people sometimes bring me some poor squashed creatures from the roadside) and for my own reptiles should the need ever arise.
I feel very strongly indeed that this is by far the most humane method of euthanasia and I have used it with several terminally ill leopard geckos on a couple of occasions over the years (I keep these as pets, and breed from two pairs each year). Even though the texts say it can take 10 - 15 minutes to achieve unconsciousness, I have never known it take more than a minute or two, even when given into the coelom. It can be almost instantaneous. The secret is to give enough. The drug itself is very, very cheap and I think there is no excuse for a vet not to give a massive overdose; maybe 10 times what would be needed to kill the reptile. That way, huge amounts reach the brain very quickly and the animal becomes unconscious really fast.
However, for tiny babies the needle itself is large in comparison, and I may be "soft" but I cannot stab a little hatchling in its belly with a hypodermic needle. I am certain this would cause pain and terror. Very, very rarely (maybe once every couple of years) an abnormal baby hatches out and I no longer try to "save" these - they rarely thrive as adults and no-one wants to buy them anyway. So, I don't inject these tiny creatures. Although I find this very unpleasant and I have to summon up courage to do it, I use the "instantaneous destruction of the brain" method described in the article, which basically means placing the baby on a flat concrete surface and completely destroying the entire head in a fraction of a second with one swift (heartbreaking) blow with the side of a housebrick.
I do understand the problems facing breeders who may need to euthanase a number of animals too large to be killed in this way, but who don't want to spend the large amounts of money charged by a veterinarian for a consultation/injection/carcase disposal etc. In that case it might be possible for them to negotiate some sort of special rate for the process, whereby there is minimal consultation, merely signing of consent forms etc? I'm sure many vets would be prepared to discuss such a thing.
If you own a pet reptile, though, then if you do care for your pet, it is your responsibility to be certain you don't cause it pain. I do believe, if it is anything other than a very small baby, and/or you are uncertain whether its head is going to be completely destroyed first time, however inexperienced you are... then you need a vet to give it a massive overdose of pentobarbitone sodium. Because this is a controlled drug, at present this is the only way to get it done.
I would plead with people not to consider suffocating them, gassing them, drowning them, freezing them, or chopping their heads off whilst leaving the brain intact....Reptile brains are like ours, as far as we know, in their ability to experience pain, but very, very different to ours in their ability to survive torture which would render a mammal unconscious very quickly indeed. The only way to be sure a reptile is killed humanely is, as I said in the article, to destroy its brain instantaneously ... or to anaesthetise it first, and then destroy its brain in any method that might take a bit longer."